Diego, I don't disagree with your post...there is no reason that someone hiking from SF to LA shouldn't do their homework, be realistic, be prepared, push back on their boss who wants them to do it faster, and do it…
You can only dilute someone who owns shares. I haven't seen any evidence here that he even owns any shares.
Untrue. The company usually owns the patents. It just depends on whether he assigned his IP to the company when they incorporated, which he should have.
It doesn't matter whose name is on the patents if the company owns the patents.
This is quite straightforward. You either own stock in the company or you don't. You own stock in the company if you received shares when you founded it and/or if you received options, vested them, then exercised the…
Diego, I don't disagree with your post...there is no reason that someone hiking from SF to LA shouldn't do their homework, be realistic, be prepared, push back on their boss who wants them to do it faster, and do it…
You can only dilute someone who owns shares. I haven't seen any evidence here that he even owns any shares.
Untrue. The company usually owns the patents. It just depends on whether he assigned his IP to the company when they incorporated, which he should have.
It doesn't matter whose name is on the patents if the company owns the patents.
This is quite straightforward. You either own stock in the company or you don't. You own stock in the company if you received shares when you founded it and/or if you received options, vested them, then exercised the…