Finnish Bureaucracy Takes Issue With Crowdfunded Textbook
linjaaho writes "Senja Larsen, who runs popular Facebook study group Senja teaches you Swedish, collected $14,161 via Kickstarter's crowd funding service. The project caught much media attention in Finland (TV and all major newspapers), since it is the first crowdfunded book project in this country, and among the first Finnish crowdfunded projects. (Previous ones include the movie Iron Sky, the role-playing game Myrskyn Sankarit, and the Wishbone headphone wire manager).
Now, after successfully collecting the funds for the book (and after the book has been edited and printed), the National Police Board of Finland has asked Senja to submit a statement [PDF; Finnish] concerning using crowdfunding to finance a project [PDF; Finnish] and the terminology used. It is possible that all the funding collected must be returned. The main problem is that direct translations of terminology at Kickstarter, such as 'bounty' and 'support,' are interpreted to mean collecting money without giving anything back, and this kind of operation requires a permit which can be only given to associations, not to private persons, and it takes long to apply for such permit."
Yet another case of bureaucracy gone wild...
you need a ;licence to take money without promising to give anything back
Aren't you supposed to get something (say, a copy of the final product) in exchange for your contribution? Sounds like some Bureaucrat thinks his workload is a bit low...
In an ideal world, we would adapt the laws to the people. In this world we try to adapt the people to the law.
Basically looking for a technical solution for a social problem.
Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
As can be seen from the lawyer responce (the "concerning using crowdfunding to finance a project [PDF; Finnish]" link in Summary, while asking for money while giving nothing in return in Finland requires a license, on Kickstarter, people submitting money are actually making a pre-order of a product (the book in question), so that particular law does not apply.
Only the government and those they anoint may request money without giving anything back.
Also:
The main problem is that direct translations of terminology at Kickstarter, such as 'bounty' and 'support,' are interpreted to mean collecting money without giving anything back, and this kind of operation requires a permit which can be only given to associations, not to private persons, and it takes long to apply for such permit.
The problem isn't the translation. That is, literally, how Kickstarter works. Pledges are to be considered "donations". Not *charitable* donations, but donations none-the-less. There is no guarantee that the project will succeed or that anything promised to backers will ever be fulfilled. This is stated in Kickstarter's own information. Backing requires some degree of investigation, judgement, and an understanding that you're essentially just chipping in to see a project you are interested in reach completion. If it is successful and obligations to backers are fulfilled, that's a bonus.
I like Kickstarter and I've backed more than 180 projects, so far. However, it is not without some weak points that could potentially be a detriment to its entire existence down the road. Such as their eagerness to just green light almost anything (like the lottery winner who failed at his pizza startup and decided he wanted to raise over a million bucks to build an MMO or the endless stream of middle aged people wanting you to fund their gospel album or their obnoxious ten year old kid's debut pop album). Or their complete lack of vetting projects and those submitting them.
That may come back to bite them in the ass, some day, since their entire continued existence relies on a high result-to-failure ratio as far as trust. Considering they only add between one and three or four dozen projects per day, that shouldn't be a problem to do some minimal vetting of each project. Especially since they get five percent of each successful project and that can run from them pocketing $2,000 on some of the smaller successful video game kickstarters to $400,000 on some of the larger ones like Ouya and the Pebble Watch. Not investing some of this revenue into the one absolute necessity (trust) that their company requires will be the utmost negligence.
The main problem is that direct translations of terminology at Kickstarter, such as 'bounty' and 'support,' are interpreted to mean collecting money without giving anything back, and this kind of operation requires a permit which can be only given to associations, not to private persons.
Does this mean people in Finland cannot also accept donations for projects they are working on since this is technically the same "giving money for nothing in return" issue?
They got a book. This is a 2 way transaction.
Just another case of the state restricting free trade.
Being oppressed again when something comes in the way of making everyone worship their language above all others... or else :-) This Senja Larsen person is quite an annoying example of the idea that being a member of her language-cult is an expected feature of a person who isn't somehow particularly closed-minded, uncivilized, yadda yadda. Perception is everything, and she and her kind truly know how to push an agenda.
It's not as if our tax money aren't already being used to fund Swedish textbooks... I wonder when contributing to her cause twice becomes mandatory? "Status of Swedish" and all, you know.
I want to play Free Market with a drowning Libertarian.
Well you need a permit in order to collect. This makes it a bit harder to collect money for legimite purposes but also much harder for all kind of scam artists for collecting money for "cancer kids" (alghtough that also happens in Finland from time to time. So its not bullet proof.)
Especially in this situation. What a total load of bullshit!
Only permanent US residents paid through a US bank account are eligible for Kickstarter. Why does the Finnish government think it can dictate the terms of a project where a US company is paying a US resident to do stuff?
Bogtha Bogtha Bogtha
Basically this seems to suggest that all charity and donations would require a special permit. Even asking someone for help when starving.
But after a bit of thought, it occurs to me that people in Finland don't have to beg for help. Here you need no permit but the collection jar on the counter is for something like a child with cancer. In Finland you wouldn't need a collection jar. Poor and hungry or in need of shelter would beg here. In Finland they would be fed, housed, and given medical treatment without any begging.
We truly are barbaric here in the US in some ways.
One reason you don't see the jails as full of people as in the USA.
And here I thought it was the lack of a "war on drugs", maximum sentences of 20 years, where we'll toss you in prison for 40 for mere possession, if you have enough of it.
Not many people end up in prison over the more unusual laws. It's normally stuff like violence - murder, assault, robbery. Theft - burglary, theft, shoplifting, and the WoD.
I don't read AC A human right
In most countries you are entitled to start your own company if you feel like it... When you start selling books, you probably should start a company/association/foundation, or some sort of entity...
Just because they aren't called donations doesn't mean that in reality they aren't.
See also: waddling, quacking.
Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
It's impossible to translate anything into Finnish. Even if it's in Finnish to start with.
Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
... are socialist.
The law about money raising predates Internet and is heavily based on assumption that you go from door to door with a box. This is kind of "known issue" and EFF has been pushing changes. So I'd hope the law will get updated sometimes in future.
In the US, Kickstarter projects are subject to the FTC's Mail Order Rule. The Mail Order Rule basically says that if you order something, it has to be delivered or your money refunded within a specified time. The seller can specify a firm future delivery date, and if they don't, there's a 30 day default. Also, if the seller can't deliver, they must refund your money without you having to ask for it. The seller can ask for more time, but if you don't respond, they have to refund the money. This is a good rule; it keeps the mail order industry honest.
In the early days of the Web, many companies that accepted online orders got into trouble with the mail order rule. Usually, this was because they had online ordering but a paper-based order fulfillment system, and accepted far more orders than they could fill. Then they made excuses rather than refunds. The FTC fined companies for that. Now, everybody serious has the shopping cart system connected to the inventory system, so the order isn't accepted if it can't be shipped.
So Kickstarter companies in the US can get in trouble if they don't deliver. ZionEyes, with their vaporware "HD glasses", ran into this.
It seems that a lot of people are commenting that do not understand what's going on. The issue is quite clear but legally somewhat complicated.
In Finland (my country), it is not allowed to collect money from the general public without a license (except when begging, street musicians etc.). The only ones that can get a license are companies and organizations. Private persons can not obtain a license. In addition, an organization can only be licensed if it is for non-profit and has a public interest. Therefore collecting money can only be done as part of a business or for non-profit charity-type things.
The reason for the licensing requirement is mainly two-fold: to prevent money laundering and keep track on who's supposed to be taxed. In addition, there is a tradition that collected money should only go to a good cause. The licensing makes (usually) sure the money collection is legit and not some fraudster ripping people off.
The issue here is that the woman (Senja Larsen) doing the book, is a private person collecting money from the public. She can therefore not obtain a license because of the law. The only way she could collect the money is trough a company, but then she has to give something in return ie. sell something (and pay taxes etc.). However, the consumer laws does not allow doing business where it is not by default sure if the customer will get anything. You can not as a company say that "maybe we'll deliver your book if you pay us" because then your business becomes a lottery. Now, lotteries (gambling), can only be held by non-profit organizations with a public interest, not by for-profit companies.
This all adds up to a situation where the writer either has to establish a business selling her book or stop collecting money from the public. It does not matter how she collects the money or trough which media. The Finnish law applies as long as she is operating in Finland.
This is not a case of crazy bureaucracy. The laws applicable are in place to protect customers and prevent fraud and are quite reasonable.
exactly what europe (small e intended) is doomed to ... brainless bureaucracy that entangles any and all innovation in the name of vested interests. If the powers that be do not reverse this horseshit thinking we are doomed to law regulated, asphyxiating bureaucratic thinking that will doom any chances of future growth .
"...asking for money while giving nothing in return in Finland requires a license..."
Does the Finnish government have the license required for asking for money for a license (that gives nothing in return)?
-Styopa
As a Finn, I don't think the this law is very good one. Few years ago, there was a lot of criticism against it as people though that it was unfair. It more or less prevented collecting money in certain situations -- like if a home gets burned down and the family don't have home insurance, you cannot collect money to help them build a new home (although you are free to donate, but you cannot organize collection of donations -- if I remember correctly).
I cannot remember if some details of the law has been modified since, but IMHO, it is still a bad law. Many associations, like boy scouts, have managed to break this law by mistake, when they haven't remembered to get neccesary permits.
It's not bureucracy gone wild
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you're quite happy to live in a world where every time you want to "do things"
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