Wow, this is the douchiest e-mail I've seen all day. And that is saying a lot.
On Fri, Jan 1, 2010 at 5:36 PM, John Pratt <jpra
...@gmail.com> wrote:
> I used to run Fundable.com until a few months ago, when I decided to
> shut it down against the will of my business partner, who allowed some
> serious programming errors and customer service issues to take place
> without informing me. The final straw was when he said, "John, you
> should sell your part of the business to me because the Austin Police
> department is thinking about filing charges against Fundable. Get out
> while you can." That's when I shut down the credit card processing
> and took the domain away from him.
> For those of you who insist on thinking that the truth always lies in
> between two accounts of a situation, I urge you to drop that misguided
> notion, especially for this situation.
> I feel that this story is important to tell you because
> Kickstarter.com copied us. I tried for 4 years to get people to take
> Fundable seriously, traveling across the country, even giving a
> presentation to FBFund, Facebook's fund to stimulate development of
> new apps. It was a series of rejections for 4 years. I really felt
> that I presented myself professionally in every business situation and
> I dressed appropriately and practiced my presentations. That was not
> enough. The idiots wanted us to show them charts with massive
> profits and widespread public acceptance so that they didn't have to
> take any risks.
> All it took was 5 super-connected people at Kickstarter (especially
> Andy Baio) to take a concept we worked hard to refine, tweak it with
> Amazon Payments, and then take credit. You could say that that's
> capitalism, but I still think you should acknowledge people that you
> take inspiration from. I do. I owe the concept of Fundable to many
> things, including living in cooperative student housing and studying
> Political Science at Michigan. Rational choice theory, tragedy of the
> commons, and collective action are a few political science concepts
> that are relevant to Fundable.
> Yes, Fundable had some technical and customer service problems.
> That's because we had no money to revise it. I had plans to scrap the
> entire CMS and start from scratch with a new design. We were just so
> burned out that motivation was hard to come by. What was the point if
> we weren't making enough money to live on after 4 years?
> During those 4 years both of us had to take full-time jobs from time
> to time. Neither of us were that well-connected in the tech community
> or Fundable would have grown a long time ago. It wasn't for lack of
> trying to reach out to people. The company was making barely enough
> money for us to cover expenses and pay ourselves on the side. Our
> server space was donated during the entire 4 years.
> I cannot tell you how painful it is to watch 5 assholes take your idea
> and run with it and not even give you credit. I hate all 5 of them
> for that. If I see them, I may punch each one of them in the face.
> If you have never started your own company and then had someone else
> steal the credit for what you worked hard to develop, you don't
> understand.
> The Fundable/Kickstarter fundraising model matters. It's huge. It
> could change the development of funding the arts as well as the
> political process. We had an idea of this 4 years ago, but it was
> very difficult to bridge theory to practice. To be honest, I didn't
> even know if it was going to work most of the time and I sometimes
> wondered if I was wasting my time. We laid the groundwork for
> Kickstarter to exist. Don't forget that when you use it. If you were
> in a similar situation, I would remind people of your contributions as
> well.
> If you have met me in L.A. and you dismissed Fundable before or you
> failed to return my calls or you flaked on me in person or just said,
> "oh that's a cool idea" and then left our conversation, don't make the
> same mistake this time with my new project, located at PDXCell.com.
> PDXCell is an entity that will produce a decentralized wireless phone
> service for the city of Portland, where I now live. The goal is to
> establish a very low cost wireless system that provides quality
> unlimited internet access and local wireless phone service for around
> $10 month, very likely through WiMax. That's the goal.
> The details can be found at PDXCell.com. You are welcome to help, as
> this is not a web startup or a non-profit. This project is not a
> startup. It will require the collective desire of many people to make
> it come into being. I think, however, that if you read the web page
> you will become and advocate.
> I got burned with Fundable in a lot of ways, but at those times I get
> a better perspective on the situation I am not very bitter because I
> realize how much I learned and how much I got to experience. More
> importantly, all Kickstarter projects are Fundable projects, I just
> don't receive any money from them. The Kickstarter founders know
> this. The web community knows this. Now you know this.
> I won't be making the same mistakes with PDXCell.
> Be a part of it.
> -John
> --
> BarCampLA Wiki: http://barcamp.org/BarCampLosAngeles
> BarCampLA Blog: http://www.barcampla.org/
> BarCampLA Group: http://groups.google.com/group/BarcampLA?hl=en
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