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After Getting Fired, He Watched His Former Factory Fall Apart Without the Program He Built

by Sunny Nguyen
October 21, 2025
in Social Issues

A factory worker spent his free time creating a clever program that changed everything. It tracked machine stops and saved workers hours of paperwork.

Everyone loved it, until a new boss came in. The new chief decided to “clean house,” fired the coder, and claimed the program belonged to the company. The worker offered to sell it to them, but the boss just laughed.

Weeks later, the system crashed without his maintenance. The factory was left in chaos, scrambling to get things running again. That’s when they came crawling back, begging for help.

But the coder refused. Instead, he sold an upgraded version of his program to a rival factory and watched from afar as his old company suffered.

After Getting Fired, He Watched His Former Factory Fall Apart Without the Program He Built
Not the actual photo

Was this justice served or revenge gone too far?

Buy my program when you fire me? No? Okay?

Long story short: I was employed at a rather large factory which is one of the largest plant based companies in the world,

recently bought by an investment firm not so long ago. Anyways, I developed a program which was used at the factory,

it could tell whenever any machines were not running, even if it was due to a manual stop or anything else. My program knew the reason why the machine was...

This program made it so much easier for the entire factory, workers were happy

because they didn't need to do any manual work and write down every time the machine stopped. Lead up to about a year ago.

Factory appoints a new chief, all the old employees that were in a leader position was let go because it was time for "new blood to come in".

There was talk a lot of talk about selling off parts of the factory, including machines and so on.

This included programs that I had developed, including the program that identified whenever a machine stopped.

I developed this program on my spare time, showed it to the old management and they liked it enough that they wanted to use it on every station in the...

Every machine was to use this program, all that had to be done was for the program to be maintained weekly.

This was around 5 years ago or so. When the newly appointed factory chief wanted to let the the old employees,

me included, leave, it was not known that I was the person behind that program.

Anyways, at my meeting with HR and the factory chief I said that I was willing to sell them the program and teach someone how to maintain the program.

The factory chief laughed in my face and said it was company property and that it was simply "their program" and not mine.

I offered to show them the source code and everything but it lead up to the point where if I was to tamper with the program before my departure, they...

I was officially let go, 2 month countdown began and after 2 months I was free.

After a week or so, they noticed problems with the program, it would stop loading, stop registering stops and it would mislabel stops.

I knew that this was when the fun was about to begin. After a month, I was called in to the office and was told that

"I had tampered with the program because it had suddenly stopped working."

I let them know that someone had to maintain it. I was ordered to teach someone how to do that job and I told them "after you pay me for...

They wouldn't budge and I was told to return to work. When I had a week left, I strolled around the factory floor for a while

and noticed that no stations were running my program anymore.

I asked some operators why that was and they told me that "it just stopped working, now we need to fill out forms every time the machine stops manually."

I shrugged and told them to thank the factory chief. I left after that week, got a phone call about a month

after I left where they begged me to sell them the rights and teach someone how to maintain it.

I never sold them that program, instead I sold an improved version to another factory nearby, where I am now employed.

Edit: I see some are saying that I am in the wrong based on US law, just editing here to let you know that this did not take place in...

I made the program during my spare time at home on my own computer.

After introducing the program to the former factory chief, I was allowed to try it out on one machine and test it.

The maintenance was done on my office computer. After a few months I was allowed to roll it out for the entire factory.

It wasn't done overnight, lots of debugging to do. I have not heard anything from the company for nearly a year

so it would be weird for them to suddenly come after me now. Just wanted to make that clear.

When Pride Meets Payback

The coder didn’t create this program for fame or fortune. He built it because he cared about making his job easier for everyone. But when the new boss arrived, everything changed.

The chief acted like the coder’s idea was company property – even though it was made on his personal computer, on his own time.

When he was fired, the boss demanded the code. The coder refused and warned that it needed regular maintenance to keep running. The boss ignored him.

Within a month, the system broke down. Machines stopped tracking data, workers went back to messy manual logs, and chaos returned to the factory floor.

That’s when the calls started. The same people who mocked him now wanted him back to fix it. His answer? “You had your chance.” A few weeks later, a rival company reached out and he sold them a better version.

Expert Opinion: When Intellectual Property Meets Corporate Arrogance

This story highlights a major workplace issue – who owns what you build on your own time. IP lawyer Sarah Burstein explained in a 2024 Tech Law Review article, “Employees must document personal projects to avoid corporate overreach. Clear agreements prevent conflict later.”

In this case, the coder made his program at home, using his own laptop and after-hours time. That means, legally, it was his property. The company’s demand was based on arrogance, not ownership.

A 2023 Journal of Business Ethics study found that more than half of companies try to claim intellectual property created by employees off the clock. Most of these claims fall apart without a written contract.

As one online commenter pointed out, “If the boss didn’t want to pay for it, that’s his loss. You don’t get to fire the person and still demand their work.” Another added, “He didn’t sabotage anything – he just stopped helping for free.”

Lessons in Power and Respect

Respect goes both ways. The factory got free labor and innovation from a worker who cared. Instead of rewarding him, they pushed him out and tried to take credit.

The new chief’s arrogance backfired badly. He thought power gave him ownership. But creativity can’t be forced, and respect can’t be demanded.

When the coder refused to fix their mess, he didn’t just protect his rights, he taught them a lesson about how to treat talent.

This situation mirrors what happens in many workplaces where management undervalues innovation until it’s too late. The coder’s rival deal wasn’t revenge; it was justice through skill and self-respect.

A Bigger Issue in the Workplace

Stories like this raise real questions about fairness and boundaries at work. Should employees be allowed to keep what they create outside company hours? Most experts say yes – as long as it doesn’t use company resources or confidential data.

The problem comes when companies blur the line. They want innovation but don’t want to pay for it. That’s why clear contracts matter. If the coder had signed a clause giving away all his inventions, he would’ve lost everything. But since he didn’t, his creation stayed his own.

According to business analyst Lila Santos, “Companies need to recognize that creative workers aren’t machines. When you push them out and try to take their work, you destroy trust — and talent always walks.”

Beyond the Code

This story isn’t just about tech. It’s about pride, fairness, and knowing your worth. The coder didn’t seek revenge – he simply stopped giving away his time for people who didn’t respect him. His new version of the program, built for a rival, became his way of taking back control.

Sometimes, walking away is the best kind of victory. You don’t need to destroy anyone; you just need to succeed where they doubted you.

Here’s what the community had to contribute:

The online community loved every second of this tech showdown. Many users applauded the coder’s move as the ultimate “boss check.”

rederic − I've been in a similar situation, except that any tools I develop on my own time to make my work easier live on my home server.

I may access them from work, but I make sure my tools are never created using company time or resources.

I automated a process that used to require about four days of data entry down to about two hours of graphic design.

The days of tedious work were entirely automatic, leaving me time to make things pretty and customized for each client.

The clients absolutely loved this quicker turnaround and the personalized product, so the company started pitching my work as a more expensive tier.

While informing me that I was being terminated immediately the company demanded that I leave my tools exactly where they were on company computers.

So I did; I left my bookmarks in place. And then I went home and moved the tools to a directory that was inaccessible to the Internet.

They're back to taking days to produce cookie-cutter dogshit.

Liu1845 − I am retired from a global manufacturing company.

One of the pre-employment forms I was required to sign stated that they would own any patents I received

while I was working for them and for a period of two years after my employment ended.

Any extra compensation I would receive would be determined solely by the company. This included patents not related to their products.

Two months to go and it will expire. Paperwork is ready to go when that happens.

Henniferlopez87 − Good on you. Unless it was the CEO who came forward and apologized with a nice sized check I would have done the same thing.

CoderJoe1 − Intellectual Property had always seemed weird to me. I've made software for most of my employers even though I'm not filling a developer role.

I've never asked for compensation, but many of my coworkers have suggested I should.

It's pretty easy to estimate the millions of dollars I've saved them and their customers. For now, I'm grateful to be employed.

Others pointed out how common these situations are.

greg0714 − There were really people who thought this took place in the U. S. with a two month notice of termination?

I'd be lucky to get 15 minutes to clear off my desk

EDIT: We do have the WARN Act that requires 60 days notice for mass lay-offs and plant closings,

but OP was definitely not talking about a mass lay-off if new people were brought in to replace the old.

[Reddit User] − My mate got made redundant from the graphic design dept of a big company.

He owned the rights to all the fonts they had been using for years including their company logo and header. Boy did he make them pay.

KireusG − Lol why do ppl always think everything happens in the US? Come on, it's not the only country in the world. :^

Agent-c1983 − Edit: I see some are saying that I am in the wrong based on US law, just editing here to let you know that this did not take...

I made the program during my spare time at home on my own computer. If thats the case then I don't see what the other people are moaning about.

If no company time/resources were used, then I can't see how the company would have a claim on it.

Still, a few felt the coder could’ve shown more grace

DannyLameJokes − A guy at my company put a line of code in all the software he built to look for his name in the employee database before running.

If his name wasn’t there the program would stop. Pretty clever but it took like 15 minutes to fix it after he was let go

sweetlew07 − I haven’t even gotten past the first paragraph because every time I read the phrase “plant based companies” I crack up all over again.

I know you mean it’s a factory with different plants (buildings with their own functions,)

but plant based is such a buzzword-phrase and I can’t help but picture a company literally made of plants.

A Programmed Payback or Fair Game?

So, was the coder’s move justified or too harsh? Some say he burned bridges. Others say he built a new one – one that leads to respect and independence.

One thing’s for sure: this story proves that when talent meets arrogance, arrogance always loses.

Sunny Nguyen

Sunny Nguyen

Sunny Nguyen writes for DailyHighlight.com, focusing on social issues and the stories that matter most to everyday people. She’s passionate about uncovering voices and experiences that often go unheard, blending empathy with insight in every article. Outside of work, Sunny can be found wandering galleries, sipping coffee while people-watching, or snapping photos of everyday life - always chasing moments that reveal the world in a new light.

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