I agree with Bobr. As someone who regularly keeps friendly relations between several parties who “know” they are “in the right” I can tell you that it’s unlikely the complete story is being told once emotions take over. When that happens truth takes a back seat to “being right”. From reading the logs, emotions were inflamed far too early with kewbit threatening to stop right at the beginning. You can’t lead a horse to water. At that point, the CSS should have dispassionally lay down the law without insult or consession and either negotiate an end to the CSS or negotiate new timelines and expectations.
My reading of that likely happened is this. Kewbit appears to have classic engineer delusions. Engineers naturally overestimate their abilities and underestimate the difficulties. Experienced engineers or well managed engineers know about this tendency and add buffers and contingencies “just in case”. Kewbit likely thought he could do more than he was able to in the time period, but “knows he is just needs to get over a minor difficulty to make up the time”. When he missed his deadlines, he became defensive and the emotions on both sides started there and escalated.
Could the drama been avoided? From the CSS side, yes. Calling Kewbit an exit scammer automatically ends any hope that can be resolved and brings needless drama. When the deadline was missed and attempts at negotiation (which are not likely show in the published logs) failed, the CSS should have been withdraw and a settlement should be made. At most, it should have been announced, “Due to on project completion disagreements, the CSS has been withdrawn. Anyone else that wishes to take over the CSS may apply with a plan.”
In that particular case, I didn’t overestimate my ability, I can prove that by releasing the fully completely code today, however that’s obviously not in my interest now. The root cause of the issue here is pretty much impatient Reddit mods, with enough influence to assert a particular narrative. I have written about it a bit here:
You’re right in that it’s a complex system to navigate now, unfortunately this has tainted my reputation whether I have dont anything wrong or not. In terms of deadlines nothing was missed, accept from the deadlines (if there were any) of them to simple pay each milestone. I’ve completely Milestone 1, they paid after hours of arguing. I completely milestone 2, still nothing. Waiting on ‘professional review from expert’, this is apparently now being reviewed by a developer called Loius (who acts very much like ofrnxmr btc) who thought a serialized protobuf was obfuscated malicious code.
I just pay some people with sense will review the code.
I agree with Bobr. As someone who regularly keeps friendly relations between several parties who “know” they are “in the right” I can tell you that it’s unlikely the complete story is being told once emotions take over. When that happens truth takes a back seat to “being right”. From reading the logs, emotions were inflamed far too early with kewbit threatening to stop right at the beginning. You can’t lead a horse to water. At that point, the CSS should have dispassionally lay down the law without insult or consession and either negotiate an end to the CSS or negotiate new timelines and expectations.
My reading of that likely happened is this. Kewbit appears to have classic engineer delusions. Engineers naturally overestimate their abilities and underestimate the difficulties. Experienced engineers or well managed engineers know about this tendency and add buffers and contingencies “just in case”. Kewbit likely thought he could do more than he was able to in the time period, but “knows he is just needs to get over a minor difficulty to make up the time”. When he missed his deadlines, he became defensive and the emotions on both sides started there and escalated.
Could the drama been avoided? From the CSS side, yes. Calling Kewbit an exit scammer automatically ends any hope that can be resolved and brings needless drama. When the deadline was missed and attempts at negotiation (which are not likely show in the published logs) failed, the CSS should have been withdraw and a settlement should be made. At most, it should have been announced, “Due to on project completion disagreements, the CSS has been withdrawn. Anyone else that wishes to take over the CSS may apply with a plan.”
Thanks for the post.
In that particular case, I didn’t overestimate my ability, I can prove that by releasing the fully completely code today, however that’s obviously not in my interest now. The root cause of the issue here is pretty much impatient Reddit mods, with enough influence to assert a particular narrative. I have written about it a bit here:
https://kewbit.org/kewbit-responds-to-creator-of-basicswapdex-com-ofrnxmr/ https://kewbit.org/addressing-the-false-proclamation-of-exit-scamming-allegations-by-basicswapdex/
You’re right in that it’s a complex system to navigate now, unfortunately this has tainted my reputation whether I have dont anything wrong or not. In terms of deadlines nothing was missed, accept from the deadlines (if there were any) of them to simple pay each milestone. I’ve completely Milestone 1, they paid after hours of arguing. I completely milestone 2, still nothing. Waiting on ‘professional review from expert’, this is apparently now being reviewed by a developer called Loius (who acts very much like ofrnxmr btc) who thought a serialized protobuf was obfuscated malicious code.
I just pay some people with sense will review the code.