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SSOAC Software Operations

Operating terms

Operating terms & cofounder agreement

We keep our terms short and stated in plain language. These are the boundaries of how we work, written so you can read them before you commit, not after.

Term 1

Licensed to build, not liable for outcomes

SSOAC holds the licenses needed to produce the software we build. That license covers our right to make the software; it is not a promise about what happens when you use it. SSOAC is not liable for any damage caused by the use of our software or by any dependency you place on it.

Term 2

Support and adaptation, without an uptime promise

We provide support and adapt software to your needs. What we do not do is pretend that support is always on. SSOAC does not guarantee that support is available at all times, nor that products are maintained constantly. We would rather state this plainly than imply a service level we have not committed to.

Term 3

No refunds, except at our discretion

Digital products sold by SSOAC are non-refundable. The company may choose to issue a refund, but that is solely at its own discretion and is never an entitlement. We say this up front so the terms of a purchase are clear before you make it, not after.

Term 4

Cofounder revenue share

The first people who collaborate on a given piece of software become its cofounders. Cofounders handle that software's distribution and provide feedback to improve it, and in exchange they receive 50% of each sale of that software. It is a partnership and revenue share, not a hire.

Cofounder model

How the cofounder partnership works

1

We build the software

SSOAC designs and ships a custom-made, agentic application built to optimize and organize real work for a specific activity or industry. The product exists and runs before anyone is asked to sell it.

2

First collaborators become cofounders

The first people who collaborate on a given piece of software become its cofounders. The title is per-product: you are a cofounder of the thing you work on, not of the whole company.

3

Cofounders distribute it and feed back improvements

Cofounders own the distribution — getting the software in front of the people who need it — and send back the real-world feedback that makes the next version sharper.

4

Every sale is split 50/50

For each sale of that software, the cofounder receives 50%. It is a standing revenue share tied to the product, not a one-off bounty and not a salary.

FAQ

Cofounder questions, answered plainly

What exactly is a "cofounder" here?

It is a partnership role on a single piece of software, not a job and not equity in SSOAC. Your role is to distribute it and to give us the feedback that improves it. In return you take 50% of every sale of that specific product. You can be a cofounder of one product or several — each is its own arrangement.

How is the 50% calculated and paid?

It is 50% of each sale of the software you cofounded — a per-sale split, tracked against that product. This is a share of revenue from sales, not a guaranteed salary or a fixed retainer: if the product sells, you earn on every sale; the exact payout cadence and reporting are set with you when you come on board.

What do I actually commit to?

Two things: getting the software in front of the right buyers (distribution), and sending back honest, usable feedback to improve it. That is the partnership — distribution plus feedback, in exchange for half of every sale.

Is it exclusive? Can I cofound more than one product?

The cofounder model is per-product, so you can be a cofounder on multiple pieces of software, each with its own 50% split. We will be clear about any per-product terms when you join a given product.

What about support and maintenance?

SSOAC provides real support and adapts the software to users' needs. Being honest: we do not guarantee that support is available at all times, nor that any product is maintained constantly. The support is genuine — it is simply not a 24/7 SLA, and we would rather tell you that plainly than over-promise.

What are the hard terms I should know before signing up?

Three, stated plainly: (1) SSOAC holds licenses to produce the software but is not liable for any damages caused by using it or depending on it; (2) support and adaptation are provided but not guaranteed to be always available, and products are not guaranteed to be constantly maintained; (3) there are no refunds on digital products — the company may issue one, but only at its own discretion.