[webproducers] Re: What do you think?

The twist that makes this interesting is that he didn't do this work under his 
current company nor as a freelancer, he did it when he was an employee of 
Rapidigm, an IT outsourcing company. When I worked for Rapidigm they didn't 
seem to understand that a people should be able to put work done under their 
name in their personal portfolios. Perhaps there was something in their client 
contracts that precluded them from advertising work they did, and this guy is 
also covered under that clause. 
So, they may have some kind of case. I still can't see why they'd go to all 
this trouble. But I agree, the way he's handled it isn't great. In situations 
like this, it's always better to kill them with kindness first. He has to 
decide how much having this client in his portfolio adds to his current 
business development.

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