close to the truth.Harvey Williamson wrote:So what you guys are suggesting is:orgfert wrote:Charles wrote:Maybe this is a valid point. I feel like the anonymity of the program gives me the right to do this. If a real author stepped forward, obviously I would never make an accusatory statement without careful documentation.
He may mean this:
I have this guy by the balls.It does not matter even if Ippo is not a clone, as soon as he reveals himself I will slap him with a lawsuit -- What you dont know is that he was an ex-employee who worked with the code and signed a contract preventing from using any ideas or code of Rybka.
These contracts are quite common and legal. Many times, a programmer cannot even re-use his own work -- the code, ideas and implementation all belong to the company ..
-- sounds plausible ?
Yes. It smells something like that. It could also be the case that the missing source never belonged to Vas for a similarly interesting reason. It would explain all the tap dancing.
1. Vas did not write R3
2. He hired someone to write it for him.
3. This person broke his contract and released it.
4. As soon as he names himself he will be in a lot of trouble.
5. This explains why Vas has kept quiet.
Interesting theory.
1.Vas did not write Rybka. he is only a salesman like Ossi weiner.
2.he hired someone to write it.
3.when there was an argument about money or whatever, the
original programmer took the codes/sources (he had licenced them to
vas, but they were his) and left the company.
vas was without sources. could not make any updates because he was
never the owner of the sources. only the salesman.
4.the programmer put HIS sources online as freeware
to damage vas sales.