I read some of your comments to others and based on that, here is my suggestion:
- Code without the person who wrote it is mostly going to be useless. You think you can get traction quickly using his code but that's not how it works. You have a sales/marketing/product market fit problem clearly since for 6+ months, you have no meaningful users as you said. So don't worry about keeping the code.
- Seems like your co-founder has decided to pivot and wants to re-use some/all of the code for the new thing. Clearly, you don't want any part of it and you are better off starting fresh even if that means you have to get someone to do the coding again.
I think it is good that he wants to let you pursue the same idea on your own but you need legal help to ensure that you both sing contracts that allow him to do what he wants and allow you do what you want and no possible conflicts happen in the future. One way is to ensure that there is no IP sharing.
Code is mostly useless and can always be re-written. So focus on what you can do on your own to pursue the same idea since you 2 failed at it together. I would evaluate that and go from there.
- Code without the person who wrote it is mostly going to be useless. You think you can get traction quickly using his code but that's not how it works. You have a sales/marketing/product market fit problem clearly since for 6+ months, you have no meaningful users as you said. So don't worry about keeping the code.
- Seems like your co-founder has decided to pivot and wants to re-use some/all of the code for the new thing. Clearly, you don't want any part of it and you are better off starting fresh even if that means you have to get someone to do the coding again.
I think it is good that he wants to let you pursue the same idea on your own but you need legal help to ensure that you both sing contracts that allow him to do what he wants and allow you do what you want and no possible conflicts happen in the future. One way is to ensure that there is no IP sharing.
Code is mostly useless and can always be re-written. So focus on what you can do on your own to pursue the same idea since you 2 failed at it together. I would evaluate that and go from there.