Actually, I hear you betababe. Integral Technologies has had the appearance of being run by a bunch of drunken pirates for a lot of it's existence. The difference I see now (in spite of Doug Bathauer's many missed timelines and promises) is that real applications are coming in. And, there is no way that the companies that I mentioned as having patents using Electriplast (Delphi, East Penn) in addition to others that they have other agreements with would ever establish these agreements without extensive testing to make sure that the material functioned as advertised (Hangwha, Chang Rim, BASF, etc). There's just no way - these companies are not going to simply buy into some salesmen's BS and enter an agreement. That is how the engineering world functions to the point of exhaustion - engineers who approved these agreements would be certain that the material is ligitimate.
There are a lot of market driving mechanisms pushing materials like EP forward (lightweighting, electrification, autonomous driving, etc) and the fact that carbon fiber (which I believe is the critical factor for the $/lb cost of the material) have been greatly reduced. So, time will tell, and there is a lot of risk I agree, but there are also a lot of very positive factors in place that were not present 20 years ago or even 5 years ago. Good luck to all in any case.