On 08/02/2009 08:14 PM, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
Arnold Krille wrote:
  
If you didn't sign a contract and work on a project, the 
copyright is still yours
    

Are you sure? I guess (and I'm not sure) that if you did some kind of 
work, e.g. being a developer for a company, it implies that the employer 
will take on the copyright and that you aren't allowed to disclose 
know-how, even if there isn't a special contract saying this. If I'm 
wrong, this  would give me some thrilling views for my future, because 
of my past and especially a friend could benefit from this, because he 
did much more for other people than I did.
  

Just because you work for a company or contribute code to a company doesn't give them exclusive license to your code.

You have to *explicitly* sign or give that right away.

IIUC, if you don't sign a contract or otherwise agree in writing or verbally that your code is not owned by you or your company then it's yours or your companies to do with as you or your company will.

Caveat is that your use of the code can not infringe on any other rights for any other owners of any code that you have used as part of your code or linked to in a way that makes it a part of your codebase in a legal definition of any licenses that are attributed to code that you have used or linked with.


phew.....


This is why gpl is so much simpler and loved.

Patrick Shirkey
Boost Hardware Ltd



_______________________________________________
Linux-audio-dev mailing list
Linux-audio-dev@lists.linuxaudio.org
http://lists.linuxaudio.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-audio-dev