This is wild
-> The dramatic 50-page complaint alleges racketeering, misappropriation of trade secrets, tortious interference, unfair competition, and aiding & abetting breach of fiduciary duty. The lawsuit is largely centered on an employee whom Rippling claims was working as a spy for Deel.
->Ripplingsâ lawyers note that[...] âRippling employeesâ Slack activity is âlogged,ââ, âmeaning every time a user views a document through Slack, accesses a Slack channel, sends a message, or conducts searches on Slack, that activity (and the associated user) is recorded in a log file.â
-> It was a sudden spike in that logged activity, and specifically how it centered around the word âDeelâ that raised a flag to the (HR?) team that tracks that activity.
-> âThe channels D.S. previewed during this period have no connection to his payroll operations job responsibilities,â states the complaint. âWhat they do relate to, however, are all aspects of Ripplingâs business development, sales, and customer retention strategiesâthe most sensitive of the Companyâs Sales and Marketing Trade Secrets and confidential business informationâwith a particular emphasis on a single competitor, Deel.
Complete with a setting up a honeypot in a sting operation
-> According to the lawsuit, Rippling set up a âhoneypotâ to prove out its suspicions. The company created a fake Slack channel and shared its name with key Deel execs, then sat back to see if D.S. searched for it. He did, claims the lawsuit.
And then the alleged spy hid in the bathroom to avoid handing over his phone.
-> Things got very heated afterward, per the filing, which says that when an independent solicitor attempted to seize D.S.âs phone by court order, D.S. escaped to the bathroom, âlocking the door behind him and refusing to come out, despite the independent solicitorâs repeated warnings.â
-> Rather than comply, it goes on, âD.S. was heard âdoing somethingâ on his phone by the independent solicitor, who also heard D.S. flush the toiletâ suggesting that D.S. may have attempted to flush his phone down the toilet rather than provide it for inspection.â It did not recover the phone later.
I really wonder how this one is going to play out
Previously
(88 points, 8 hours ago, 10 comments) https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43388133
(32 points, 7 hours ago, 3 comments) https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43388769