>>So, do the routines that I have developed over time and use regularly (some of the logic goes *way* back) remain my intellectual property even if embedded in something that I have written as an employee?
>
>I don't think anyone has suggested anything of the kind. In message after message, I've seen it stated that if you develop code as an employee, it belongs to the employer. If that's not the case, it's yours.
>
>However, if you develop general-purpose code as an employee (and who doesn't generate new general-purpose code on each and every project?), it belongs to the employer. That's a bit of a problem, for which the only solution is not to be an employee. :)
I get the feeling that the word which is pronounced "employee" is actually spelled either "serf", "villein", or "slave" depending on how restrictive your owner... oops, that's "boss" is.. Hi ho! thank god the 20th century is almost over.
Jen
(who can't remember which of her sigs won the award.. better dig up the archives)
A bipolar theory does not neatly describe a continuum.
Before millenium: chop wood, draw water. After millenium: chop wood, draw water.