Joseph O'Connell
joconnell at indy.rr.com
Thu Jan 20 10:41:42 CST 2005
Karen, Are there payment terms in your agreement? Does your agreement expressly state that you have the right to terminate use of the program if payment is not received on time? If the answer is NO to either question, then you better check with a lawyer before you deny access to a program which the client deems critical to its business. You could end up with a huge liability for interferring with the clients ability to conduct its normal business. Of course, you should not be required to perform additional services until their account is currrent. Joe O'Connell -----Original Message----- From: Nicholson, Karen <cyx5 at cdc.gov> To: accessd at databaseadvisors.com <accessd at databaseadvisors.com> Date: Thursday, January 20, 2005 8:19 AM Subject: [AccessD] The Polyp Problem I know this has been discussed before, but I sort of removed a polyp from my client abuser list last night, as a woman has the right to flip out on deadbeats. That is the law. Here is the story. Client contracts for a job; agrees to pay whatever way - some do in stage I, more in stage II and the rest in stage III. It is clearly stated that changes to the requirements of the system will be discussed and additional invoicing will be required. Polyp continuously *forgets* to pay invoices as that is not is department, makes wild changes to the system - "Oh, didn't I tell you? Truck A, B or C can not go on streets with a 2 Ton Limit? You can just program that in, right?" Or emergency call - finger nail bimbo's system won't work and it is the hub. Your system broke it, we can't function, come over here right now. Drop everything, run over, and low and behold the cable is unplugged. Three hours out of your day, gee thanks. Oh, we can't pay you, it has been a bad year. And that $2000 we still owe you from August? That is coming soon. Hello, it is snowing! In my warped world, I would like to put code in the program that when a payment is not received, the system stops working. When the bill is paid, the user can have the encrypted password to keep working. Doesn't that sound easy? One final password when the system is paid in full. I know a geek could break into it and get around the password, but these people are cheap to begin with if they won't pay and not work continuing working for anyway. Ideas? -- AccessD mailing list AccessD at databaseadvisors.com http://databaseadvisors.com/mailman/listinfo/accessd Website: http://www.databaseadvisors.com