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by jamesjporter 4616 days ago
The story I read about it claimed the following:

He had made changes/improvements to various FOSS projects he was using at Goldman that he wanted to submit as patches upstream but his bosses wouldn't let him. He figured that since he was leaving he might as well take the FOSS code he had modified with him so he could submit patches later. The legality of this maneuver is tenuous at best, as others in this thread have noted, but in my opinion probably doesn't merit years of hounding prosecution and criminal charges.

1 comments

Okay. That's interesting. I guess it could be true. Or it could also be a very creative and barely plausible explanation that happens to fit the provable facts of the case. It certainly requires us to accept an astonishing degree of naïveté in an otherwise very smart guy.
> It certainly requires us to accept an astonishing degree of naïveté in an otherwise very smart guy.

You haven't met many programmers, have you?

(I'm speaking of myself as well as friends and associates, here.)