Intellectual Property Disputes

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Intellectual property can be best described as "creations of the mind", for example visual art, design, inventions, literature. Intellectual property can be protected by law with patents, copyrights or trademarks, which allow the creators to protect their ideas from being used or stolen by somebody else.

Most crowdfunding platforms protect themselves by not taking any responsibility if the projects, which are posted on their site, get stolen. Some of them do, however, take action if they are informed that one of the projects which is currently in the process of collecting funds is using somebody else's intellectual property. In the case of Kickstarter, they "freeze" the campaign for a period of 30 days to resolve the dispute. If the problem is taken care of, they then re-post the project, otherwise it is cancelled. They inform the backers that the project they are financing is removed for the time being with an email, such as this one:

”Hi there,
This is a message from Kickstarter Support. We're writing to inform you that a project you backed, GameStick: The Most Portable TV Games Console Ever Created, is the subject of an intellectual property dispute.
The law requires that we remove the project from public view until the process is complete or the dispute is resolved. If we are not able to re-post it within 30 days, we will cancel the project, all pledge authorizations will expire, and the project will be permanently unavailable.
If you'd like to manage your pledge, you can do so through the project page:
http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/872297630/gamestick-the-most-portable-tv-games-console-ever?ref=email
If you have any questions, we encourage you to message the creator directly. You can also do this from the project page.
Thanks so much for your patience and cooperation,
Kickstarter” [1]


File:Schema intelectual property dispute.pdf


Presentation Disputes

The first kind of intellectual property disputes regarding crowdfunding would be presentation disputes. They occur, when project creators use somebody else's intellectual property as material for their own presentation. In most cases these disputes can be quickly resolved, if the creators remove the controversial material from their presentation or if they gain permits from the owners.


GameStick

GameStick is a video game console developed by PlayJam. The project was launched to Kickstarter in 2013 with the aim of collecting $100,000. Sometime during the campaign Kickstarter pulled their project off the site due to an "intellectual property dispute". It turned out, that the campaign presentational video included some footage of a video game, for which they did not have the proper rights. They removed the problematic content, re-edited their video and were put back up on Kickstarter. They successfully finished their campaign, receiving almost $650,000. [3] [4] [5]


Idea Theft

On various occasions crowdfunded projects find themselves in the middle of intellectual property theft discussions, but unless the products are patented or otherwise protected, it is very hard to come to a fair conclusion. Many of such disputes are never resolved and most of them are discussed privately between the project creators. In cases of intellectual property theft it is close to impossible to remain objective and for that reason we will not discuss any examples.


Flykly Smart Wheel & The Copenhagen wheel

FlyKly Smart Wheel [6]

In late 2009 the SENSEable City Lab (MIT) developed the technology of the Copenhagen Wheel, but it was not available for sale right away. Then in October 2013, a very similar technology was launched as a Kickstarter campaign, called the FlyKly Smart Wheel. At the same time as FlyKly's campaign, a new company, Superpedestrian, announced their funding to produce the MIT's Copenhagen Wheel, but no details or timelines were revealed. The FlyKly Kickstarter campaign was successful and soon after that, Superpedestrian began accepting pre-orders for the Copenhagen Wheel.

When the representatives of the projects were asked about the similarities, Biderman, the lead behind Superpedestrian, stated “I don’t know if these guys at FlyKly are infringing on our patents because I haven’t looked inside. But from the outside it looks a bit similar. […]Their founder actually dropped by our lab at MIT a year and a half ago, saying he wants to collaborate, and spent quite some time with the Copenhagen wheel team. We’ll leave it at that.” Niko Klansek, the founder of FlyKly doesn't deny his visits and tweeted: "No patent overlap with the CW. The idea of a "smart wheel" has been around for 20 years and is not patentable in and of itself." [7]


Identity Theft

After a project was presented on one of the crowdfunding platforms it sometimes happens, that after some time the same project (same name, same presentation and material) is posted again by somebody else on a different crowdfunding site, who is collecting funds off of somebody else's idea. This is known to have happened various times via the platform Indiegogo, since it is especially exposed to such frauds, due to their "flexible funding" system, which enables creators to collect funds as soon as they are donated by backers. Most of the crowdfunding sites do not release the funds until after a campaign is successfully completed.


The ShopBot Handibot, Pirate 3D, Hinges, Like a Virus...

The ShopBot Handibot [8]

A Kickstarter campaign for the ShopBot Handibot, a new "smart" digital power tool, was going well over their initial goal of $125,000, when the owner of ShopBot discovered, that a nearly identical Handibot campaign was running on Indiegogo, with text and graphical material copied directly from their Kickstarter project website - only the funds were going to a different account. The same happened with various other Kickstarter campaigns, e.g. Pirate3D, Hinges, Like a Virus. All four Indiegogo sites were cancelled and removed as soon as the real creators notified the service. [9]


Reselling

Sometimes a creator takes and existing item on the online market (for example from E-Bay or Amazon), rebrands it and promotes it on a crowdfunding platform as their own work. The item is usually promised as a reward for backers who donate a certain amount of money, which vastly exceeds the actual price of the item. The creator actually buys the product off an online shop and then offers it as reward for double or triple the money its worth.


Free Roll Machined Player Dice

Free Roll Machined Player Dice [10]

A man started a Kickstarter campaign for a set of aluminum RPG game dice, which he advertises as his own design. The backers, who donated at least $30.00, would get a set of these dice as a reward. The campaign was with $5,000 well above the asking goal of $1,500 with only a few more days to go, when somebody found the exact same item being sold on Amazon online shop, only that the entire set was worth only about $12.00. The creator then cancelled the campaign himself and never collected the funds. [11] [12] [13]


References

  1. GameStick Pulled From Kickstarter Due to Intellectual Property Dispute (Updated) Downloaded on Dec. 5, 2014
  2. GameStick: The Most Portable TV Games Console Ever Created Downloaded on Dec. 5, 2014
  3. GameStick: The Most Portable TV Games Console Ever Created Downloaded on Dec. 1, 2014
  4. GameStick pulled from Kickstarter citing 'intellectual property dispute' Downloaded on Dec. 1, 2014
  5. Kickstarter's growing problem with intellectual property Downloaded on Dec. 1, 2014
  6. FlyKly Smart Wheel Downloaded on Dec. 5, 2014
  7. Reinventing The Wheel. The Smart Wheel vs. The Copenhagen Wheel (Part 1/3) Downloaded on Dec. 5, 2014
  8. Handibot™: A Smart Digital Power Tool Downloaded on Dec. 5, 2014
  9. Crowdfunding Confusion: Scammers Attempt to Rip Off Successful Campaigns Using Indiegogo Downloaded on Dec. 1, 2014
  10. Free Roll Machined Gamers Dice (Canceled) Downloaded on Dec. 5, 2014
  11. Free Roll Machined Gamers Dice (Canceled) Downloaded on Dec. 1, 2014
  12. Aluminum Dice 5 in 1 Set Travel Case Deluxe Gift Souvenir Downloaded on Dec. 1, 2014
  13. Free Roll Machined Gamers Dice Turns Out to Be Kickstarter Scam Downloaded on Dec. 1, 2014