An old man walks into the confessional booth in a Catholic church, and says "Father, I have been faithfully married for 50 years, but recently I've begun a torrid love affair with a beautiful blonde 18 year girl."
"Tell me, my son," asks the priest, "how long has it been since your last confession?"
"Never, Father," says the old man, "I'm not Catholic."
The priest is taken aback, "Then why are you telling me?"
The old man chuckles, "Oh Father, I'm telling everybody!"
When you have something that the known laws of physics say can't work, and you know it does work, why wouldn't you want to show it to everyone? I understood the secrecy back when Rossi was (supposedly) being told that his device was unpatentable, and so I didn't write it off; I hoped, and crossed my fingers, and waited. But what's the hell is the hold up now?
If test-units are being assessed by Greek authorities for safety/etc, and if a Greek factory has been running a test unit for a year... if all those claims are true, and not just hot-air, why isn't there any video, or even a photo, of any unit except Rossi's clumsy lab kit?
And if the production company is gearing up for ">300000" units per year, and if they have been granted a Greek patent, and have lodged a US patent (which the USPTO said is enough to protect them from copy-cats)... and if test-units are being assessed by Greek authorities... if those claims are all true, and not just hot-air, why haven't they loaned out ten or so production prototypes to any lab that wants them? No one can steal their tech, their IP is protected, why not end the nonsense and let people play with these things themselves. Not just standing back while Rossi waves a hose around, but actually run their own tests, in their own labs, on their own terms. I just don't understand why you wouldn't be passing these things around like candy to anyone who shows the slightest interest. Hell, I'd be holding international conferences every month with a dozen of prototype units on display, inviting every energy-using company in the world (which is every company) to come and look; showing it off, explaining how it works, taking pre-orders, creating buzz.