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by hn9780470248775
3858 days ago
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Another question: How do you develop a side project when your employer insists that it owns all intellectual property you produce? Edit: As far as I know this is a very standard clause in tech company employment contracts, and is perhaps the legal default even in the absence of such a clause. For example, see "Employed to invent" under http://www.nolo.com/legal-encyclopedia/pre-invention-assignm... . California is an exception to the above: here employees may retain the rights to IP they create on their own time, not using resources of their employer (including company laptop), and, importantly, not in the same line of business as their employer. In the tech field, the "same line of business" caveat can be killer. |
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1. Renogiate with your employer: but beware, many employers with this clause in it are unlikely to remove it, plus even bringing up the possibility will make an independent thought alarm go off in management/your HR file. I myself do not seriously suggest this strategy. It also makes it almost impossible to then implement strategy 3, as record of the request is itself something that may link your future work back to this company.
2. Quit/find another employer.
3. Lie. Work on your own project somehow, and make sure nothing can concretely link it back to your time working with said company. Do this until you can implement strategy 2.