"hopefully what is recognized by both camps is tha
Post# of 43064
You've been in penny land for way too long. When information put out by a company answers some questions but consistently creates new questions, there's a communication problem. Good communication should just answer questions. If there's something hidden behind each answer, you know there's a problem.
Again, take the SAIC 'validation' as an example. SAIC's report said that the process could be commercially viable (hooray!) and then five months later we find out that SAIC was hired to rely on some of JBI management's assumptions (What were those assumptions?? What were the bases for those undisclosed assumptions??).
If you ever get out of the penny stocks, know that if every answer just spawns more questions, the problem isn't just over-inquisitive investors.