It lets plants use natural light, the climate control of your living space, and organic “liquid soil.” Windowfarms was a Brooklyn, NY-based social enterprise that helped city-dwellers around the world grow their own fresh food.
One year after funding succeeded on their second campaign the WindowFarm team made a final update to the Kickstarter project page, announcing domestic orders fulfilled.
The designs are released under a Creative Commons license which, despite being Non-Commercial (as well as Attribution and Share-Alike), didn't prevent Britta Riley's company from selling the kits for profit.
[8][9] July 2013, CBC News published an article explaining how Canadian and international backers feel ripped-off[10][11][12][13] by Britta Riley, co-founder of the Windowfarms.
[14] A Netherlands-based part of the community wrote an open letter to Riley, asking her to contact them,[15] and Canadian backers set up a website called windowfarmsfraud.com.