Dupe went not only......
into CyberKey's pockets but also into the shareholders pockets too. When I think back on the video commercials, they were real. When I look back on the product and the concepts, they were real too. I guess recovery would be a little too soon to discuss. Lets face it, major damage has occurred and it might take take quite a bit to just start over, but then again it is possible. Also that doesn't mean that the shell itself isn't of value though. CyberKey is still a publicly traded stock despite the pitfalls of a dupe.
Another fact is that the actual shell can be of salvage value, purchased by a plausible entity and restored back to life would be a quick solution too.
There are several opportunities here, hang tight though it's still a lot of speculation.
According to the reporting of a fully reporting transparent company: As of September 30, 2007, the Company had 168,996,941 potentially dilutive common shares (per 10Q) the TA says there are 93,725,266 shares outstanding. The question is who to believe