The more I read the different sides to the debate (regulation, non-regulation, etc).... the more I tend to agree with a hands-off approach to the entire Kickstarter and IndieGogo (and other) crowd-funding marketplace. I think the community should be the ones "policing" the sites, and not the government, SEC or anyone else. Once I heard about Kickstarter and IndieGogo (after they were already running for a few years), it only took me a few minutes to understand the risk involved in being a backer. Any person with more than 2 brain cells (which is all I have left) should be able to do the same. Here are some more reasons....
1. The internet is a wild and dangerous place to play with money
2. If you don't do your research and use your brain, you will lose your money
3. Lessons learned the hard way are sometimes the most valuable
4. There are plenty of opportunities to question and debate about products before "buying in"
5. Crowd-funding, to anyone but the most naive person, is obviously a risky venture (but can be rewarding)
6. There are places to purchase less risky products and you are free to use them
7. Consumer protection doesn't even apply to crowd-funding as far as legal framework
8. It also seems to be outside the investment and SEC jurisdiction
Perhaps the only way someone could make a case for chasing down a crowd-funding scammer is to claim they are using the funds for terrorism or to fund ISIS. That is sure to engage a whole pile of unknown government laws and mobilize agents and powers by various USA and allied countries to follow the money trail and make a mess for the crowd-funding site, scammers and so on. Imagine the headline "KICKSTARTER/INDIEGOGO USED TO FUND TERRORISM". Watch secret agent Black-Ops dropping from helicopters on the HQ of these crowd-funding sites and seizing all their machines.
Here is what I propose:The people who are involved in the crowd-funding community (creators, backers, etc) have a stake in it
should be the ones managing it. There are plenty of opportunities to write comments, question the projects, discuss issues and generally make changes to the system if people complain to the Kickstarter and IndieGogo sites (and others). If you don't like the way things are handled, or you don't like the way the system works, don't go to those sites. Plain and simple. Nobody is forcing anyone to back projects... My issue is that comments should be allowed by non-backers, but either way you can pitch in $5 to participate in the comments and then pull out your funding money before the end of the campaign anyways.... So you can comment and be a $hit-disturber as much as you want to question what is going on without risking any money anyways. People backing the project (or potential backers who read the comments) can be warned about potential too-good-to-be-true projects and use their own judgement. A fool and their money are soon parted.... no matter how much you try.
Meanwhile, educate as many as your friends as possible from being potential future victims and post articles like this one:
http://www.doctorbraun.blogspot.ca/2015/07/indiegogo-and-other-crowd-funding.html That's my 2 cents (one from each brain cell).