Yes genius, I got that the Nodejs code base of Crypti has nothing to do with the Bitcoin source. I wouldn't assume you Javascript guys would comfortable coding in C anyway. I was talking about the general concept of crypto currency and the open source sentiment that had a decisive role in the success of Bitcoin and consequently alt crypto currencies. If Bitcoin would not be successful as it is then ppl like yourself with your closed source project wouldn't be able to fuck around to get out your few BTCs from the altcoin market.
The general concept of crypto currency is change. You are trying to apply bitcoin and clonecoin prinicples to a second generation crypto.
You simple can't opensource a pure PoS coin from the beginning, because you will have clones the same day. As they don't depend on hashing power to secure the network the clone will be as secure as the original. So if you publish the code right away you shooting yourself in the foot. You need at least a few months of lead time until your community have time to mature.
Not one PoS coin published the source from day one, and not one will.
You don't even understand the "second generation crypto" market dynamics what you referring to. The greed makes you blind and you ignore the reality. Otherwise you would understand that open sourced "second generation crypto" projects like Ethereum with its 20 miilion US$ makes money despite they are open sourced and comply with the very fundamental principle of Satoshi Nakamoto. Go to github and grab their source if you want, they don't care. You do, because you are greedy.
I fully get that you are here for the dollar, and generally speaking nothing wrong with that. It's just shameful that the greed of these East-European developers like the Crypti ppl disrupts to the open source idea of crypto currencies. The scams associated with greedy developers makes the general acceptance of crypto currencies more difficult. I understand in Siberia the moral has no meaning, the East-European/Chinese culture is built around greed and money, but if you take from the community you should always give back too - in this case in the form of open source software.