OSS is a mess in EU. In Germany, signing a FTE contract also entails implicitly that, if I produce something over the weekends, my employer has legal power to claim it as their IP. If I probably contribute something to some open-source project, my employer can also claim royalty of that too. While there are not much precedents of these happening, the legal rights remain. Also, non-compete is implicit too. Also, general brilliant people loved to hold onto their motes and not contribute back, a strange tendency I noticed on corps from senior engineer peers.
That being said, not everything is dark and there are plenty of open source work going in EU.
> In Germany, signing a FTE contract also entails implicitly that, if I produce something over the weekends, my employer has legal power to claim it as their IP.
What gave you that idea? In fact, I was under the impression that Germany has pretty strong protections in that arena.
That must be Germany-specific because I don't think that's universal. As far as I know, anything I write in my free time is mine, unless maybe my employer can prove it's directly related to my work for them.
And most companies I worked for were very supportive of open source, one of them actively involved in several Apache projects and employing committers for several projects, on top of releasing their own software as open source.
> if I produce something over the weekends, my employer has legal power to claim it as their IP
I live in Germany and I'm certain you are mistaken. The situation becomes different if you so much as looked at your OSS projects during work hours, but the projects you work on in your free time are yours.
This is similar to how your FT employer can't keep you from taking up another part time job on the weekends.
Just because your contract has such a clause doesn't mean it's enforcable in court.
I try to explain to my U.S. colleagues that the fundamental difference is in the approach to funding. In the States there is a ‘gambling’ approach to funding: I fund 100 initiatives 1 coin and I expect one if them will give me back 10000 coins in a number of years and all the others are a loss. In Italy - were I have had direct experience - the approach is more of a short term investement: I give you 1 coin and expect 1.05 in two years.
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[ 1.7 ms ] story [ 40.1 ms ] threadThat being said, not everything is dark and there are plenty of open source work going in EU.
I'm not sure what you mean. Non-competes must be explicitly signed.
What gave you that idea? In fact, I was under the impression that Germany has pretty strong protections in that arena.
And most companies I worked for were very supportive of open source, one of them actively involved in several Apache projects and employing committers for several projects, on top of releasing their own software as open source.
No clue if it holds up in court though.
I live in Germany and I'm certain you are mistaken. The situation becomes different if you so much as looked at your OSS projects during work hours, but the projects you work on in your free time are yours.
This is similar to how your FT employer can't keep you from taking up another part time job on the weekends.
Just because your contract has such a clause doesn't mean it's enforcable in court.
And they are locating their business in Delaware. I wonder why. Wouldn't have anything to do with taxes, surely.