Oh, I won't say that scams never occur, nor that there are no points on which I'd like to see improvement from the crowdunding platforms.
I do note that iFind has apparently been
cancelled by Kickstarter, at least. I will say that I'm disturbed that it took as long as it did, and I'd like to see Kickstarter more closely enforcing its rules; on the positive side, I'm glad that they did at least take action.
With regards to the quantum energy project, I'm inclined to at least give the project creator the benefit of the doubt and assume that he honestly believes that he can build such a device--although I'll admit that this allowance is stretched somewhat if he is indeed an engineer.
(I'll confess that I don't know Indiegogo's track record with regards to closing down scams and the like; I'm afraid that I honestly wouldn't be surprised if they were even less assiduous about it than Kickstarter, since they do seem to me to in general be more relaxed than that platform.)
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Amusingly, I just stumbled upon the
"TrackR Bravo" on Indiegogo, which looks an awful lot like the iFind--save that, at a glance at least, it looks plausible (for one thing they admit to having a battery inside the thing). I wonder whether the iFind was actually inspired by the TrackR (which launched on the 9th of June; I don't see a starting date for the iFind offhand)?