Source: https://thesocialmediamonthly.com/critical-comment-period-issue-on-sec-title-iii-for-crowdfunding/
Timestamp: 2019-04-21 22:02:15+00:00

Document:
As you may know, the comment period for the proposed rules for Title III crowdfunding will be up in a matter of weeks. I wanted to reach out as one of the items within crowdfunding legislation that may cause a problem for entrepreneurs looking for capital and the investors trying to sort deal flow is the prohibition against non-registered broker-dealers having the ability to do Assessments of companies.
The way the proposed rules are written could effectively prevent portals from employing modern search and sort capabilities, which is one of the most important functional necessities in any e-marketplace. A lack of sorting capabilities would essentially eliminate a good deal of the benefits to investors crowdfunding was meant to have.
Below you will find a comment letter written by Judd Hollas of EquityNet that outlines the problem and brings up a solution.
Re: File Number S7-09-13; Securities and Exchange Commission call for comments pertaining to 17 CFR 200, 227, 232, 239, 240 and 249.
3) ask that the drafters carve out an exemption in the safe harbor allowing portal user feedback which is user sortable, subject to § 227.402(b)(4), in light of the rewrites proposed to solve the issues posed by points 1 and 2.
The key issue at hand in § 227.402(b)(3)(ii) is the prohibition of investment advice by parties not registered as Investment Advisors in concert with now-existing federal law and rules.(2) The proposed rule, as drafted, appears to be structured to bar portals from creating sorting features for investor users as a mechanism to filter or sort search results based on the advisability of investing in the underlying issuer or its offering, or from sorting based on any derived opinion based on any characteristic of same issuer. While we fully support the SEC’s stringent safeguarding of consumer welfare in the spirit of this section, we wish to draw your attention to important practical issues that result as a consequence of certain word choices and omissions, including the potentially crippling inability for investors to use objective criteria to navigate through thousands of offerings on a platform.
For instance, in the simplest of circumstances, a sorting mechanism assesses the value held by a variable in order to return either true or false. If one were to limit the search and sort functionality of a simple search to businesses in the state of Washington, the portal would query databases that contained the data the portal maintained, and for each business, a value would be stored in a variable which either marked that business as belonging to the group “in the state of Washington” (true) or not belonging to the group “in the state of Washington” (false). From here, the portal would systematically assess the values stored in the variables and print only those members which had a value of true, indicating that they belong to the group “in the state of Washington”.
Because programming language architecture requires the assessment of values stored in variables in order to provide return sets, this creates a contradiction between § 227.402(b)(3)(i), and § 227.402(b)(3)(ii). By example, in § 227.402(b)(3)(i), it is clearly established that objective search and sort criteria such as geographic location, the type of securities being offered, and the industry or business segment of the issuer are allowable. However, because each of these factors must be assessed computationally and are characteristics of the issuer, while permissive under § 227.402(b)(3)(i), they are expressly barred under § 227.402(b)(3)(ii).
In light of the above, the ambiguity of the word assessment can be further highlighted in situations where an objective sorting mechanism can be created using the criteria barred from assessment in § 227.402(b)(3)(ii). For instance, those utilizing a portal may be interested in sorting issuers by years of experience of key management, among other things, which can easily be quantified objectively without portals rendering any advice or opinion. As illustrated above, assessment is so substantially vague as used when applied to technology that the effect of using it here would be to bar any sorting algorithm that could, at the user’s direction, sort by management experience.
We believe this issue can easily be remedied by changing the term assessment in the section as written, to opinion, which better characterizes the policy intentions of the section, and removes from doubt the possibility that the Commission intended to impede the technological processing of the information, as above.
Turning to the use of the phrase objective criteria in § 227.402(b)(3)(ii), it is clear from the drafting of the section and the subsequent notes released by the SEC that the Commission is seeking to remove from safe harbor provisions any disillusions that portals may have that they are free to inject their opinions into the decision making process of their users. However, and as we are sure the Commission is aware, objective criteria are necessary free of opinion and bias. The result of the language appears to be the banning of objective criteria that are subjective in nature, which confuses the subject and raises a question as to whether or not objective criteria which are not subjective in nature are banned from use, as well.
Here, too, we believe the issue can easily be remedied by removing the term objective criteria, and replacing it with the verbiage: “search and sort functionally may not be based on subjective criteria such as […]” which better illustrates the policy intentions in the section and removes from doubt the intentions held by the drafters.
Lastly, and in concert with § 227.402(b)(4), investors will have the ability to provide feedback via comments and discussions on portal sites. We believe investor generated information and due-diligence can have a profound impact on fraud deterrence. Where an investor may be local to an issuer or have in the past dealt with an issuer, or where an investor may just be zealous in their due-diligence, they would be in a better position to offer their independently-derived opinions than the average investor.
While not directly addressed in the text of § 227.402(b)(4), it follows from allowing investors the ability to collect their thoughts and comment on any underlying issuer, that portals allow investors to assign a quantifiable indicator to each other’s comments, and even to quantify their own thoughts on the issuer. Examples of this can be seen in marketplaces throughout the internet, from product markets such Amazon and Overstock, to personal information sites such as Yahoo Answers. Allowing investors the ability to sort through each other’s comments or opinions becomes an integral part of any site where commenting is allowed on products: it empowers the users to search out the best and the worst of the comments and research their claims, and gives the sellers – or in this case issuers – a chance to respond to claims in an open forum.
Because sorting comments would require a technological assessment of subjective data, however, we believe an explicit carve out in the safe harbor provisions is necessary, especially in light of the considerations enumerated above.
We therefore propose a change of language in § 227.402(b)(3)(ii) to replace the term assessment with opinion, ask that you remove the inference that matters of opinion fall within the realm of objective criteria, and ask that you carve out an exception for user generated peer review sorting in the safe harbor provisions as below.
Except in the instance of peer review and feedback generated by users subject to § 227.402(b)(4), search and sort functionally may not be based on subjective criteria such as, among other things, the advisability of investing in the issuer or its offering, or an opinion of any characteristic of the issuer, its business plan, its key management or risks associated with an investment, generated exclusively by the portal.
We appreciate the opportunity to comment on the proposed rules, and understand that you are tasked with a monumental challenge in drafting new rules to cover this ever expanding realm of the internet. Should you have any further questions or wish further comment, please do not hesitate to contact us at (866)542-3638.
1. H.R. 3606 enacted April 5, 2012; In this letter, we refer to the Securities and Exchange Commission as “the SEC” or “the Commission”.
2. Investment Advisors are categorized as intermediaries under § 227.300 et. seq. While similar issues may exist for intermediaries, this letter is strictly concerned with the safe harbor provisions applicable to portals as addressed in § 227.400 et. seq. of SEC publication 33-9470.
3. Assessment in this context refers to the use of the word in § 227.402(b)(3)(ii) and in subsequent notes on safe harbor provisions in SEC publication 33-9470.
4. “Assess” is defined by Merriam Webster as “to determine the importance, size, or value of”. Where in both mathematics and technology variables are assessed to determine their size or their value, where for instance x = 6, 6 is the value of x, it becomes obvious that using the word assess to imply an opinion can cause issues.
If you feel as passionate about this subject as we do, I would invite you to download and print the attached letter in support by the SEC deadline of February 3rd and send it to rule-comments@sec.gov in pdf or Microsoft Word with the subject line of your message reading “File No. S7-09-13.” You can also mail three copies of your comment letter to the address below or visit www.regulations.gov to search for and comment on the rules.
Other ways to participate are to reach out to CFIRA at CFIRA.org to see how you can get more involved.
Joy Schoffler Principal of Leverage PR has spent her career launching high performing startups—helping them raise capital and achieve growth through creative publicity strategies. Leverage PR works with the leaders of the crowdfunding industry, investment firms, and high potential startups. She has helped early-­‐stage companies raise more than $20 million, make the Inc. 500 list, and secure Fortune 500 accounts. Joy has been featured in Inc. Magazine and Forbes.com, and regularly contributes her crowdfunding and public relations insights to outlets like Entrepreneur Magazine and Social Media Monthly. Joy developed the first-of-its-kind publicity platform for crowdfunding and growth- phase companies—CrowdBuilder that will be available in early 2013. CrowdBuilder will allow companies to leverage the power of publicity to raise investment capital, close new accounts, and grow their businesses. Joy is the Chair of the Publicity Committee for the CFPA.

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