All that is occurring is pre-orders. The kickstarter web site is just being used as social media promotion.
You're not even pre-ordering something. With Kickstarter you are funding the project, with the expectation of receiving a reward at the end of it.
Many Kickstarters have ended with the backers not receiving anything, not receiving what they expected, or having the reward delivered very late - and I don't know what, if any recourse you have - Kickstarter certainly won't refund your money.
Many projects are successful and actually end up spending all of their funding on delivering the rewards, or even
losing money at the end of it all, because they had not properly estimated the costs of their rewards, or something unforeseen pushed the price up.
Now I don't expect someone "famous" like Neil Young to rip people off and not deliver the players, but it should be made clear to people that they are not buying a product. Kickstarter is not a store.
Kickstarter sales are not necessarily a good indicator of a successful product either - it's entirely possible that everyone who wants a Pono is buying it right now, or people want a "piece of the experience" by buying one of the limited editions - or they simply want it because it's another collectible item from a band they like.
Personally, after evaluating things, I decided that the Pono player is not really what I want - it's not something I am going to carry around in my pocket (too big) I don't care enough about any of the artists to want their signature on it (I refuse to buy something made of plastic if there is an alternative) it doesn't have DSD support or the ability to function as a USB DAC, and it doesn't have the storage I need if I'm going to carry high res tracks around with me.
At $200 I would have jumped in, but unfortunately by the time I finished watching the pitch videos, they were all taken. (should have just "bought" it first I suppose)
I'd rather put $300-400 towards a new smartphone which is more than just a music player, or one of the competing high res players that have a realistic amount of storage for high res files. (the new AK240 has 384GB)
Wow you perfected a time machine ! What year are you posting from ? Must be far in the future from 2014.
Do you really think Pono is going to get the public paying $25 an album again, when iTunes sales at $9.99 or less are on the decline due to services like Spotify and iTunes Radio taking over?
Taken out of context like that, it reads as though my post has the opposite meaning though, implying that the days of YouTube streaming are over. In fairness, that whole sentence could have been worded better.