People incorporate in Delaware for several reasons: corporate legal disputes are handled by judges rather than randomly selected juries; one person can fill multiple roles for a company (e.g., he can be listed as the CEO, treasurer, and secretary -- other states don't allow this); since so many companies do it there is more established case law and precedent (= less risk); and, of course, the filing fees are cheap.
People incorporate in Delaware for several reasons: corporate legal disputes are handled by judges rather than randomly selected juries; one person can fill multiple roles for a company (e.g., he can be listed as the CEO, treasurer, and secretary -- other states don't allow this); since so many companies do it there is more established case law and precedent (= less risk); and, of course, the filing fees are cheap.