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I am working on a Project. I intend to create a company, we'll call it MyCompany, and then sell my Project as a product of MyCompany. Currently, before I finish my Project, can I say, "I am the founder of MyCompany," without actually having any physical representation of it? Do I need to fill out some legal paperwork before I can say that I am the founder of my own company?

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What do you mean 'can I say...."? It is going to depend on what you mean by that. – itsmatt Oct 16 '08 at 20:38
He means, "Is it legitimate to say..." – Mark Brady Oct 16 '08 at 20:39
I think this would technically be called a "lie" – Jeremy Michael Cantrell Oct 17 '08 at 14:44
I don't know if there's legal trouble to be found here, but speaking from startup experience, you won't lose any credibility with fellow startup founders or investors by calling yourself a founder. Even if it's founder of a project instead of founder of a company. – sblom Feb 27 at 18:29

closed as not programming related by brian d foy Oct 16 '08 at 21:12

15 Answers

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You don't have a "company" until you create some sort of legal entity. So no, it's not your company in that sense and you're not a founder until you actually do some work.

If you change it to business, I'd say you're fine saying you're the owner of your business. The guy selling flowers at the intersection has a business. I seriously consult with a patent lawyer before copyrighting anything you want to retain rights on in the name of something that's not a legal entity.

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people are legal entities – Mark Cidade Oct 16 '08 at 21:05
...but people are not companies or businesses, which was the question. Incidentally a patent lawyer is not likely to get involved with copyright, they are completely different provisions. Copyright does not protect your intellectual property, only the expression of it. – Simon Oct 16 '08 at 21:17
You can't get a patent for your code unless you prove it does something novel and that someone with reasonable knowledge in the field couldn't combine two or more existing patents. What you want to avoid is theft of vast swathes of source code, and copyright will do that. – Mark Brady Feb 20 at 0:40
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Get a lawyer. Seriously. We're just a bunch of programmers - if you need legal advice, get a lawyer.

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We can't be both? – Mark Brady Oct 16 '08 at 21:03
You can, but if you were, then you would then be legally required to advise that he should get a damn lawyer! – 1800 INFORMATION Oct 16 '08 at 21:10
not true. free legal advice can be dispensed on the web just the same as it can at a party or on the golf course. there is no obligation to advise he seek a lawyer. – Simon Oct 16 '08 at 21:22
Simon, you need to be very careful about that. Say you want to sue someone in small claims court. And I, being your best bud say, It's on my way, I'll stop and pick up the form. If I do, I can be tried for practicing law without a license. Free advice is indeed free. Free legal advice can be deadly. – Mark Brady Feb 20 at 0:35
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I would strongly suggest at the very least filing for LLC or better, S-Corp status in the US. (Assuming that's where you are.) Otherwise, as Mark said, you don't have a company. Companies are almost like separate entities. They have their own tax ID number, debt, profit, etc. I have a friend who started his S-Corp just awhile ago. Took him a good few weeks to write a business plan and buy all the paperwork. Thankfully there are services out there that will file it all for you.

Last time I checked, LLC paperwork runs around $500 USD and S-Corp was a bit more.

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can you define the benifit/con's of the two, Scorp and LLC. – J.J. Oct 16 '08 at 21:00
One thing I read was: "While there are several advantages of an LLC over an S-Corp (ability to issue different classes of securities, ease of set up, informality of operating agreements, lower state taxes, non-US investors), venture funds typically cannot (or don’t want to) invest in LLCs." – Abyss Knight Oct 17 '08 at 15:52
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You can say whatever you like. However, if you intend to claim a copyright in the name of your company on something that you've done, you will need to have a legal entity with that name.

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what if he wants the copyright to be in his name. and the company/business just sell it? – J.J. Oct 16 '08 at 20:58
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You don't need paperwork to have your own business (but you'll end up with plenty).

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You can downvote it if you want, but I've owned my own business, have done all my business taxes, and know exactly what's required. – Lance Roberts Oct 16 '08 at 20:42
I started a business about 15 years ago in VA and there was next to nothing to do since it was a sole proprietorship. I might have got a county license but that was it. There is a lot else you could (and maybe should) do but, that was all that was required at the time. – itsmatt Oct 16 '08 at 20:51
We didn't have county licenses when I first got into business, just state ones, but I didn't get one until I needed it to open a bank account in my business name. The IRS doesn't really care if you have a license, and we didn't have State tax for it to matter. – Lance Roberts Oct 16 '08 at 20:54
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In Australia you can just register a business name and be a sole trader trading under that name. This costs < $100. This is much cheaper than setting up a proper company which cost > $1000. Do this and you can legitimately say you are from MyCompany. I am not sure if there is similar thing in the US.

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This is one you should definitely talk to a lawyer about.

As I understand the basics (at least in my state in the US), there are two main reasons why you would want to have a legal entity. One has to do with what taxes you pay on any earnings, and the other has to do with shielding yourself from liability should something go wrong with your product. (That is, if your product doesn’t work and you get sued and lose, can the person suing you get your assets, or are they limited to making their claim against the assets of the company.) One form of company is a “sole proprietorship” which is just you yourself without a separate legal entity. If you start selling the product saying that you are a company, that’s pretty much what you have, so you would be liable if there are problems and you pay the taxes.

So you can do it, but it may not leave you in the legal position you’d like to be in. I’m sure there’s more to it, so don’t take this as legal advice, but these are the topics you might raise if you talk to a lawyer.

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Okay let me be more clear about my intentions: This is for resume purposes. If I am currently developing a product to sell through MyCompany sometime in the future, can I currently put on my resume: "Founder of MyCompany. Currently developing first product"?

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I wouldn't. That's fine to say later, after you've put software out. But putting that on your resume before you've even finished a project makes you sound like a poser. – DannySmurf Oct 16 '08 at 20:50
I wouldn't use it on a resume until you've 'done something', I'd just note that you've developed software on your own, and give some details. – Lance Roberts Oct 16 '08 at 20:51
Employers can smell resume-padding. As a guy that does interviewing and hiring, I'd be less likely to be interested, not more. – Mark Brady Oct 16 '08 at 21:02
I'd have to agree on this, don't put something like this on your resume unless you had a real income that supported you. If they grill you for details on your company, you would most likely end up looking foolish. – DMKing Oct 16 '08 at 21:04
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The short answer is No.

Your question asks "can I legally..." and until you have a legal entity anything you say about it is by definition outside the legal framework. This is true in the US, UK and Europe.

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If you're serious about this, it's probably a good idea to go through the legal steps of creating the company "officially", esp. if it's as cheap as another poster indicated (~$500).

I'm not sure how much protection you actually get in the real world, but in theory a lawsuit or bankruptcy related to your business could only take business assets. Your personal assets would be protected.

That kind of protection is one of the reasons "corporations" were invented in the first place.

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you canot never called myCompany without "paper work", and here in Denmark, we don't even need paper work, just going to the Tax office website, enter our social security number and password and say that we want to open a business called "MyCompany".

They will send papers and a CVR number (company identification number) that you need to place in ever invoice and off course, pay the VAT every 3 months :)

So, in a simple sentence, you can't have a company without telling the authorities that you have it.

And remember if your don't have legally MyCompany, you can't sue anyone that will not pay your application and use it, cause you can't legally invoice them.

hope it helps.

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That doesn't apply everywhere in the US, but when it does it all gets down to taxes. – Lance Roberts Oct 16 '08 at 20:55
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In the US either through your city, county, or state, at a minimum, you are usually required to file a "dba" or "doing business as" statement. This is a short document that lists the name of your company, and then your name and address details. Usually a nominal fee is charged, I think it's like $15 or so here in Fort Worth, TX. I have done this a couple of times. Once you get more serious with your business you'll want to see about incorporating. Your location may be a little different so check with your local officials.

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In Houston, it cost under $17 to file a DBA (Doing Business As). With that, you can get a free business checking account. That's it. You're in business.

Of course, if you're doing things that you need to collect taxes for, you'll have to fill out some more paperwork. But if nobody's giving you money, you don't have to worry about that.

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For the most part you can make up any company you want and it can be legally considered yours but if someone sues you for whatever reason then you will be paying with your personal finances since legally there's no difference between you and your company—the company name is effectively an alias for yourself as a person. If you have a separate legal entity registered for your company then your personal funds will be protected from any litigation against the company.

You should check your local laws for what rights you have for your company without registrering for it, since it really depends on where you live. It's different than if you're incorporated with a state or federally, in which case the laws are more broadly known.

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So if I make a program and sell it on my website, can I legally call the program a product of MyCompany without doing anything other than thinking of the name?

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yes, you can first use your company name when you fill out your schedule C. (some of this depends on location) – Lance Roberts Oct 16 '08 at 20:43
Okay. If I don't have a product available yet, can I still claim to own MyCompany? – swarmer Oct 16 '08 at 20:44
Uh, I'd be very careful about that. If you say the work is owned by BlueHawaii Software and you have nothing stating you own BlueHawaii Software, how will you prove you own the work product? Will the check be made out to you? or the faux company? Will you claim it on your taxes or the "company's"? – Mark Brady Oct 16 '08 at 20:45
And if someone wants to sue your company and there's isn't actually a company to sue, you have none of the protection an owned corporate entity normally gives you. – DannySmurf Oct 16 '08 at 20:46
yes, you can create a company name, and declare yourself in business, then as needed do what comes up: paperwork, development, marketing, etc. It helps if you document things along the way, so you can back up your deductions. – Lance Roberts Oct 16 '08 at 20:47
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