I absolutely think the situation is becoming untenable. Something needs to give at this point. If Sprit didn't want his Paypal account frozen, he probably shouldn't have started 3 GB's, take on hundreds of participants, then stop logging in for over a month and disappear. However, he does merit one final benefit of the doubt though. I think as a community, a public petition to Sprit should be made through two avenues.
This petition would detail a deadline for when a public announcement is a needed, or people will start Paypal chargebacks, and his account will be frozen. It would be short, and non-accusatory, merely highlighting the major problems at hand: lack of/inaccurate communication, the problem with LIFO, and a shipping update. It would specify a date which he needs to have an update for the community, and the community reaction should he ignore that date. It would also feature an offer to help, he just needs to detail what he's behind on, and I'm sure there will be someone willing to step up.
This petition should be delivered in two ways:
1) Through Zeal. In this case, Zeal is merely a messenger for the greater community. He doesn't have to agree with the contents of the petition, but simply deliver the petition to him as a trusted intermediary.
2) Through the Korean forums. I don't know exactly which one, but Sprit is probably on KBDMania, KBDLabs, OTD, winkeyless, or one of the major forums. Members with access, and good-standing with each of the forums should post in each one.
This way Sprit will not have an excuse for not seeing it. It's unfair for everyone here to just assume Sprit will get all the orders filled, especially for the guys that have been in the GB for over a year, with nothing to show and no communication. It's clear that pressures are mounting and the situation is becoming more tense. One just needs to look at the increase in posting frequency to see that.
What do you all think of this idea? If a lot of people like this idea, I wouldn't mind drafting a petition for you all to edit myself. The key though, is to have a unified message rather than dozens of users individually messaging.