Chapter 1542
Mr. Kane Got Blacklisted
Mr. Kane Got Blacklisted Chapter 1542 [Eleven Jewell]
Maggie calmly pointed to her own draft and said, âUnlike your work, mine doesnât feature an openwork design.â
Barbara responded with a mocking laugh. âThatâs precisely why Iâm saying youâre a skillful plagiarist.
You would be accused of copying my work if you hadnât tweaked a few things.â
Maggieâs lips curved into a sardonic smile, and her eyes were glinting with resolute determination. She proceeded to highlight a few subtle distinctions. Barbaraâs impatience grew, and the crowd began to murmur.
âWhat kind of standoff is this? It feels like theyâre just spotting the differences.â
âI doubt this proves anything. It only shows sheâs capable of making changes.â
âI have to admit; Barbaraâs design does look better after this comparison.â
âWell, duh. How can plagiarized work be compared with the original?â
Barbara was getting upset. But, when she noticed that the audienceâs sentiments were gradually swaying in her favor, a sense of smugness began to creep in, and she relaxed a little. âWhat are you trying to say with all of this?â she asked.
Maggie was composed and collected. She turned to Kenneth and said, â Mr. Green, have you thoroughly examined these two designs?â
The elderly man nodded. âI have.â
âThen, can you determine which is the result of plagiarism?â
Barbara was taken aback.
Kenneth gazed at the two images on the screen and pointed decisively at Barbaraâs design. âThis one is the copied work,â
he stated.
The audience gasped, as they were astonished at how he discerned that.
âHow did he figure that out?â
âI have no idea.â
âCould it be that The Velvet hired him as a stooge?â
âWhat? How is that possible? Why would Mr. Green even agree to do that when heâs well-established in the circle?â
âSo⦠Is it really Barbara who copied Maggieâs work?â
âLetâs see.â
Barbaraâs expression changed abruptly. âMr. Green, please donât play the age card and spew nonsense here,â she said in a low voice.
Kenneth seemed somewhat displeased by her words. He furrowed his brows briefly but did not lose his temper. In a stern manner, he continued,â Earlier, I heard you say that this is a new series recently launched by your company, correct?â
âThatâs right,â Barbara responded cautiously. She was afraid of falling into the other partyâs trap.
Kenneth then asked, âSince itâs a new product, you must have created samples and put them into production, right?â
Barbara thought he wanted to compare the release dates of the two designs and replied, âOf course.â
But, unexpectedly, Kennethâs expression suddenly turned grave. He said, â Youâre lying!â
Barbara was startled. âHow am I lying? You need evidence to make such a claim!â
Kenneth gave her a glance and pointed to the right image. âThis kind of openwork design may look beautiful, but with this thickness, when itâs set in place, itâs extremely prone to breakage. Even if you were to make it, a slight bump could easily damage the jade. In mass production, style and quality are of the utmost importance. No designer would agree to produce a design so susceptible to damage. The material wastage is too high. The first one to be blamed would be the carver.
They would certainly tell the designer to make changes.â
He looked at Barbara after he finished his explanation. âHow could you not know this if you had made samples?