maasenstodt wrote:First, I'm not seeing anyone accusing anyone of murder or such similarly foul deeds. Let's avoid hyperbole.
Besides, "Kevin Siembeida, the Demon Publisher of Webb Court" doesn't exactly trip off the tongue.
Dunia wrote:Maybe it is time to do the Palladium way, and name this crisis so that we ca abbriavate it accordingly in all discussions as was made with the ToC or what it is called. Lets call this Deceit of the Millenium (DotM) or Years of Lies (YOL), just to be as hyping as with the Time of Crisis.
All joking aside, I'm actually kind of surprised it hasn't acquired a sobriquet like that yet.
Shark_Force wrote:investigating whether someone is guilty is not the same thing as assuming guilt. in fact, it distinctly shows that they did not assume guilt; they acknowledged there was a possibility of wrongdoing, and then essentially put them on trial to see if they were guilty or not.
You missed my point... in my example, once a single offense had been established the presumption shifted from "innocent until proven guilty" to a "guilty, maliciously motivated, until proven otherwise". Particularly when it came to forcing everyone else to recertify.
Shark_Force wrote:which, again, i am fine with putting palladium on trial. i'm not fine with the people who are calling for palladium's destruction for the sake of revenge.
I'm honestly not sure what you're expecting. People are
PISSED, and understandably so considering what Palladium has admitted to doing. As many of Palladium's defenders have pointed out, backing the Kickstarter technically makes you an investor rather than a preorder customer... and investors generally do not like being lied to about things like a project's fiscal solvency, considering that the money at risk is their own. When an investor doesn't get the promised return on their investment because of circumstances outside anyone's control, they are not happy campers but write it off as a loss and move on. When that loss is incurred as a result of negligence, incompetence, or malice, you can bet the investors will pursue every legal means at their disposal to run the owners to ground and make sure they get their due even it the company doesn't survive it.
If a company can't or won't act in good faith with its investors, the most basic of business obligations, then most would argue that company shouldn't continue to operate.
That's not revenge, that's just basic capitalism at work.
Shark_Force wrote:i'm also fine with people sharing their story and expressing the opinion that they don't trust palladium, and they don't think anyone else should either. but again, that doesn't mean an automatic assumption that they for sure have stolen hundreds of thousands of dollars when there are other perfectly reasonable explanations [...]
Not wishing to be rude, but you're attempting to make this a semantic argument.
Regardless of what verb you might want to apply to it, the bare fact remains that Palladium Books directly caused its own failure to fulfill the obligations that it had to the backers of the Kickstarter campaign by its decision to divert an unspecified but large sum of money from the project's development budget to the production of retail stock in order to generate operating capital. Reportedly capital meant to defray greater-than-expected shipping costs, but it was still a strategy which was terribly irresponsible, practically guaranteed to fail, and would have looked highly irregular and suspicious even if it hadn't been done in secret and covered up until there was barely a month remaining in the grace period Harmony Gold had given them after revoking their license.
There are many potential explanations, but I'm not sure that I could fairly say as an outsider that any of them were "reasonable".
Shark_Force wrote:going through the first page of comments on the kickstarter comments page at the moment, there are people describing PB as a swindler and calling for harsh punishment of them, people claiming that PB spent the money on other products, people claiming PB hid stuff under soundproofing at the open house, [...]
Apart from that last one potentially just being fans forgetting Palladium was given permission to hold onto sold retail stock for hand-delivery at the Open House, the rest sounds like the usual "certain point of view" stuff.
The definition of "Swindler" being "a person who cheats someone out of money or other assets", it must be admitted it's not hard to see why someone might regard that as an apt characterization. There is a good deal of discontent over all of the financial irregularities, Palladium undervaluing backer pledges owed for exchange purposes during the final weeks before the license ended, making backers doing exchanges pay shipping when shipping was already included in their pledges, the questionable legality of trying to make backers give up their right to sue in order to claim their exchange goods, and so on...
The question of PB spending the money on other projects is going to continue to dog them until they actually cough up the detailed financial accounting for RRT's expenses. The circumstantial evidence is enough for that to be at least somewhat understandable as suspicions go.
Shark_Force wrote:[...] people accusing PB of banning and silencing people on their own forums any time this subject comes up [...]
That part's pretty accurate, actually.
There were rather a lot of bans handed out to people who questioned Palladium's claims that all was well, that the money was all accounted for, and that there was no problem with the project... regardless of how civilly they did so. Hell, my own account here got shadowbanned after I commented about how strange it was the PB staff were seemingly focusing on everything BUT the RRT Kickstarter.
Shark_Force wrote:another person claiming that HG gave PB the license for free (though another backer at least responded to that one same as i did: bull crap, HG isn't giving out squat for free, they exist to make money not to be nice),
Amusingly, that part is also actually true. Harmony Gold confirmed several details when it replied to concerns raised about the end of Palladium's license. The major ones being that the license was being revoked, not expiring, and that they'd given Palladium every chance to make good... including granting them a free extension to their license several years ago in order to give them more time to salvage RRT.
Shark_Force wrote:people stating that PB deliberately dragged this out to beyond the time limit for fraud accusations (seems sketchy, i doubt that timer starts counting from the beginning rather than the end of the crime, and if there was fraud it didn't end until just a little while ago).
The Michigan statute of limitations on crimes of fraud is six years, and we're only three years out from when Palladium began to lie about the state of the project's budget... assuming someone could actually make a fraud charge stick. (My own legal experience is limited almost exclusively to contract and intellectual property law, so how feasible that is I couldn't possibly say.)
Shark_Force wrote:not that insisting that PB should be instantly declared guilty on what is quite possibly the most flimsy evidence imaginable (it essentially amounts to "i heard a rumour that PB are definitely guilty, but i can't even remember where i heard that rumour") and punished beyond the harshest extent of the law.
By in large, you're exaggerating. But there are also a lot of angry people out there who, perhaps rightly, feel they've been taken advantage of by Palladium.
Shark_Force wrote:no seriously, someone is insisting that the law needs to be made more harsh just so that PB can be hurt more by it. there is literally a person insisting that the laws of the USA should be re-written for the express purpose of hurting PB more.
That's not surprising. People tend to develop stronger feelings on the subject of justice and punishment when it's something that affects them personally.
Given that practically every political party on the planet is in favor of mandating harsher penalties for at least one category of offenses, that's nothing unusual or interesting.