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by pauldix
3924 days ago
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Despite the fact that California has this law, it doesn't matter in a practical sense. A scenario I've seen play out multiple times: 1. Employee creates side project 2. Employee quits to pursue side project as a company 3. Former employer decides to sue employee because they don't like it for whatever reason (this need not have any legitimate chance of winning in court, it could be entirely frivolous) 4. Former employee then has to decide between spending hundreds of thousands of dollars in legal fees fighting a lawsuit from the former employer or simply giving up We saw this just the other day on HN. I've seen it happen to friends and colleagues. Best thing to do: no side projects. If you have those ambitions, work as a contractor. The legal agreements are much more rational. You get paid for the hours you bill and are allowed to do any work you want outside of your billable time. |
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You should take precautions of course--read inventions agreements very carefully--but I wouldn't at all go so far as to only do contracting. Especially if you live in California, as others have noted. Half the companies in SV were started by people working at Google or Facebook.