Level Extreme platform
Subscription
Corporate profile
Products & Services
Support
Legal
Français
Code written under no agreement
Message
From
14/11/1998 21:35:33
 
 
To
13/11/1998 13:26:34
General information
Forum:
Visual FoxPro
Category:
Contracts, agreements and general business
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
00156369
Message ID:
00157703
Views:
39
>>Also, any code, techniques, methods, algorithms, etc., that you bring with you to the job remains yours, if they are not in the public domain. Anything you learn from the client, specific to the job, usually is the clients. Anything you create that didn't require propriatory knowledge divulged by the client reamins yours. At least, that is what your contract should say.
>
>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? After all I'm not going to reinvent the wheel every time I start a new project or join a new company -- that's just not realistic.
>
>I appreciate that the employer hires me for my expertise,and pays me commensurately. If they wanted a novice they wouldn't specify "X year VFP experience, in XXX environment" nor would they pay as much.
>
>However, if I use code that was originally developed by me independently of that particular employer, surely my being an employee does not transfer the copyright of that code to the employer. So far it has never been a problem for me, but if I was to employ these routines in a system, intended for that employer only, which was then packaged and sold on the open market I would have thought that I should be able to receive some sort of compensation for the fact that I had develped the code independently.
>
>Of course the burden of proof lies with me... so unless I take my routines and copyright them *Before* I join company X then there's no way I can get royalties from them.
>
>I think programmers have been screwed. We'd be better off as tabloid journalists!
>
>Jen


I try to write into my contract that I own the code. If they insist on owning it, I charge more money and I write everything from scratch. I also tell them this so they know what they are getting.
Craig Berntson
MCSD, Microsoft .Net MVP, Grape City Community Influencer
Previous
Reply
Map
View

Click here to load this message in the networking platform