Execute Your Own Downfall
The meeting was nearly over when the company's newest programmer projected a screenshot of a document bearing my name.
"Mr. Stark, I'm reporting Lina for misappropriating company assets. She put her personal name on the company's core algorithm."
Every head in the room turned toward me.
I almost smiled. I had built that algorithm on my own years earlier and later lent it to the company. Misappropriation? The accusation was almost laughable.
I expected it to collapse under its own weight. I did not expect my boyfriend, the CEO, to nod in agreement. "Lina, this was a collective effort in the end. Update the credit to the company's name after the meeting."
I struggled to process what I was hearing. He had come to me in tears, begging to use that algorithm. He had built the entire company on it.
I had trusted him completely, so I had never put a single word in writing. Now that trust had become the very thing he used against me.
A chill settled in my chest.
I picked up the USB drive and set it down hard on the table. "Fine. Change it yourselves."
None of them knew I had filed for a patent the moment I finished the algorithm.
Unauthorized use of someone else's patent was a serious offense. People went to prison for it.