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Welcome to Mysteries to Die For.
I am TG Wolff and am here with Jack, my piano player and producer. This is a podcast where we combine storytelling with original music to put you in the heart of a mystery. All stories are structured to challenge you to beat the detective to the solution. Jack and I perform these live, front to back, no breaks, no fakes, no retakes.
The rules for law and order create the boundaries for civil co-existence and, ideally, the backdrops for individuals, families, and companies to grow and thrive. Breaking these rules puts civil order at risk. And while murder is the Big Daddy of crimes, codified ordinances across municipal divisions, counties, states, and countries show the nearly endless ways there are to create mayhem. This season, we put our detective skills to the test. This is Season 8, Anything but Murder.
This is Episode 11, industrial espionage is the featured crime. This is Hoodwinked and Bamboozled by TG Wolff
DELIBERATION
Kelly may have a clue but Grant and Alistair can use our help. There is no question that Charles “Tink” Teasling invented the Tinkinator 93. This is no question that Henry Brown, Tink’s brother-in-law produced it. The question is who orchestrated the design getting from Tink to Brown? Here are the suspects in the order we met them:
Here are the facts as Kelly and Grant know them:
Who infringed on Tink’s patented idea?
ABOUT Industrial Espionage
According to Wikipedia, Industrial Espionage gathers knowledge about one or more organizations and takes place in two main forms. It may include the acquisition of intellectual property, such as information on industrial manufacture, ideas, techniques and processes, recipes and formulas. Or it could include priviledged information, like pricing, research and development, prospective bids, or marketing strategies. It includes activities life theft of trade secrets, bribery, blackmail and technological surveillance.
Industrial espionage is an old crime, with records going back to the 17th century showing the “migration” of technologies from one region or realm to another. The attitude toward this type of theft has an interesting history in the US. Back when we were a new country, this type of knowledge acquisition was all but openlyendorsed by the government. Congress passed the first patent statute in 1790 and the first patent was granted to Samuel Hopkins on July 31 for making potash, a fertilizer ingredient.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Industrial_espionage
https://www.uspto.gov/patents/milestones
ABOUT TG Wolff
Like you, I’m not one thing. I’m a writer, an engineer, a wife, and a mother. What is first on the list depends on the day. Beyond the title I claim, I’m a person who loves learning and thoroughly enjoys a good puzzle, is creative and gets bored easily. I hold a BS in Civil Engineering from Case Western Reserve University and an MS in Civil Engineering from Cleveland State University, which gives me absolutely no background in writing, but I do it anyway. Writing mysteries and engineering isn’t as different as you’d think. Both require using logic and process to get from a starting problem to a solution.
Find me at www.tgwolff.com or M2D4podcast.com
5
77 ratings
Welcome to Mysteries to Die For.
I am TG Wolff and am here with Jack, my piano player and producer. This is a podcast where we combine storytelling with original music to put you in the heart of a mystery. All stories are structured to challenge you to beat the detective to the solution. Jack and I perform these live, front to back, no breaks, no fakes, no retakes.
The rules for law and order create the boundaries for civil co-existence and, ideally, the backdrops for individuals, families, and companies to grow and thrive. Breaking these rules puts civil order at risk. And while murder is the Big Daddy of crimes, codified ordinances across municipal divisions, counties, states, and countries show the nearly endless ways there are to create mayhem. This season, we put our detective skills to the test. This is Season 8, Anything but Murder.
This is Episode 11, industrial espionage is the featured crime. This is Hoodwinked and Bamboozled by TG Wolff
DELIBERATION
Kelly may have a clue but Grant and Alistair can use our help. There is no question that Charles “Tink” Teasling invented the Tinkinator 93. This is no question that Henry Brown, Tink’s brother-in-law produced it. The question is who orchestrated the design getting from Tink to Brown? Here are the suspects in the order we met them:
Here are the facts as Kelly and Grant know them:
Who infringed on Tink’s patented idea?
ABOUT Industrial Espionage
According to Wikipedia, Industrial Espionage gathers knowledge about one or more organizations and takes place in two main forms. It may include the acquisition of intellectual property, such as information on industrial manufacture, ideas, techniques and processes, recipes and formulas. Or it could include priviledged information, like pricing, research and development, prospective bids, or marketing strategies. It includes activities life theft of trade secrets, bribery, blackmail and technological surveillance.
Industrial espionage is an old crime, with records going back to the 17th century showing the “migration” of technologies from one region or realm to another. The attitude toward this type of theft has an interesting history in the US. Back when we were a new country, this type of knowledge acquisition was all but openlyendorsed by the government. Congress passed the first patent statute in 1790 and the first patent was granted to Samuel Hopkins on July 31 for making potash, a fertilizer ingredient.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Industrial_espionage
https://www.uspto.gov/patents/milestones
ABOUT TG Wolff
Like you, I’m not one thing. I’m a writer, an engineer, a wife, and a mother. What is first on the list depends on the day. Beyond the title I claim, I’m a person who loves learning and thoroughly enjoys a good puzzle, is creative and gets bored easily. I hold a BS in Civil Engineering from Case Western Reserve University and an MS in Civil Engineering from Cleveland State University, which gives me absolutely no background in writing, but I do it anyway. Writing mysteries and engineering isn’t as different as you’d think. Both require using logic and process to get from a starting problem to a solution.
Find me at www.tgwolff.com or M2D4podcast.com