Im not sure why I have not opened this thread until now? I read the first page, but to be honest, dont feel like reading through 100 posts. I may go back and read it all in the future.
I apologize if I am beating a dead horse and my perspective has already been argued, again I didnt read through the entire thread. I did get the gist of the conversation from the OP.
As we all know, each strain has multiple phenotypes. I dont care how worked the strain is, there are different characteristics that can display from plant to plant. There may be 3 common phenos of a strain, but somewhere hidden amongst 1000s of seeds is a diamond.
If a breeder purchases a strain, and spends his money, time, labor & love running the genetics for some time, and finds a plant containing characteristics that they are looking for and then decides to use that plant for a breeding project, I think that is his right to do so. He bought the seeds. He searched through them. He put in work.
That is my stance on using another breeders genetics to create a hybrid or a cross.
Now, if the breeder wasnt putting in much work, just grabbed random pheno A and crosses it to the same strain pheno B and then tried to just sell it as their own <cough-cough> Natures sweet nothing <cough-cough> I am against this under MOST circumstances (there are exceptions, ie - an old lost strain, very rare strains, etc...)
If the breeder runs lets say 100+ of a strain. Happens to find an extremely rare pheno, runs another 100 and finds a male of this rare pheno, then continues crossing it and stablizing this pheno then I have no issues if the breeder markets the strain as their own.
No matter what the situation is, anyone of the options I listed, i feel that the original breeder should absolutely be given props for their work. The description should contain the original breeders name some where.