Daniel Berlin via llvm-dev
2015-Oct-23 15:11 UTC
[llvm-dev] RFC: Improving license & patent issues in the LLVM community
On Thu, Oct 22, 2015 at 9:54 PM, Joerg Sonnenberger via llvm-dev < llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote:> On Wed, Oct 21, 2015 at 09:10:40AM -0700, Daniel Berlin wrote: > > Let's start with: In just about every country in the world, anyone > > contributing on behalf of their company are exercising their employers > > copyright (in most cases, even if they do it in their "spare time", since > > most people misunderstand what the law grants them there). > > At least under German law, there is a clear separation between what I do > during work time and outside. Ignoring questions like anti competition > issues, my employer has no claims to what I do outside work time.Again, this is a common misconception, or so multiple german employment lawyers have told me.> That > leaves the part of "contributing on behalf of their company". >> > > Both actual (They told me i could contribute), agent (I am also actually > > authorized to contribute anyway), and apparent authority (Everyone else > in > > the community would normally believe i have authority to contribute, and > > thus, there is apparent authority, regardless of whether Google said i > > could contribute) would all bind Google when i contribute stuff. > > I don't think you will be able to convince a German court of that.and I do. With all due respect, these issues have been vetted with actual legal counsel, and they disagree with you. Strongly. When push comes to shove, i take their viewpoint over yours. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20151023/4668fa35/attachment.html>
Joachim Durchholz via llvm-dev
2015-Oct-23 17:45 UTC
[llvm-dev] RFC: Improving license & patent issues in the LLVM community
Am 23.10.2015 um 17:11 schrieb Daniel Berlin via llvm-dev:> On Thu, Oct 22, 2015 at 9:54 PM, Joerg Sonnenberger via llvm-dev < > llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote: > >> On Wed, Oct 21, 2015 at 09:10:40AM -0700, Daniel Berlin wrote: >>> Let's start with: In just about every country in the world, anyone >>> contributing on behalf of their company are exercising their employers >>> copyright (in most cases, even if they do it in their "spare time", since >>> most people misunderstand what the law grants them there). >> >> At least under German law, there is a clear separation between what I do >> during work time and outside. Ignoring questions like anti competition >> issues, my employer has no claims to what I do outside work time. > > Again, this is a common misconception, or so multiple german employment > lawyers have told me.Either these employment lawyers are delusionary, or there has been some misunderstanding between you and them. Whatever the reason, your statement about German law is flatly wrong. By German employment law default, your private time is your private time, and your employer has no say in it. He can forbid activities that detract your ability to work for him, so no binge drinking and no secondary job that might sap your ability to fulfil your first work contract, but that's about all. There can be anti-competition clauses. These are uncommon but, but they can be enforceable if properly worded (put one claim too much into it and the court may rule the entire clause invalid - German employment law is VERY pro-employee). For creative work, there may be some non-competition clause. This kind of clause, however, is forbidden by law unless the employee has some kind of executive level. There might be special contracts for inventors or artists, I don't know these areas. But I know what kinds of contracts are standard for IT employees, having signed several ones of them; I'm obligated to keep my trap shut about employer and customer internals, abide by the usual legal constraints when dealing with other people's data, and that kind fo stuff, but never ever once have I seen anything about invention or code I create in my free time. In fact I'd expect such a clause to fall down on its face in any court. Things become different at the executive level - at the highest levels, anything goes. At the standard employee level, employers are very, very restricted in what they can put into contracts.>>> Both actual (They told me i could contribute), agent (I am also actually >>> authorized to contribute anyway), and apparent authority (Everyone else >> in >>> the community would normally believe i have authority to contribute, and >>> thus, there is apparent authority, regardless of whether Google said i >>> could contribute) would all bind Google when i contribute stuff. >> >> I don't think you will be able to convince a German court of that. > > and I do. > With all due respect, these issues have been vetted with actual legal > counsel, and they disagree with you. > Strongly. > > When push comes to shove, i take their viewpoint over yours.Where these lawyers working exclusively for the employer side? If yes, I'd flatly ignore their opinion. German employment law is harsh towards the employer side; a success rate of 10% should be considered excellent - I have no idea what kind of personality or work ethics can survive under this kind of pressure, but I suspect it does warp one's sense of legal reality. Talk to a union lawyer to get the other side of the picture - probably just as biased, of course, but at least then you see which points are contentious and which aren't. Regards, Jo
Joerg Sonnenberger via llvm-dev
2015-Oct-24 16:21 UTC
[llvm-dev] RFC: Improving license & patent issues in the LLVM community
On Fri, Oct 23, 2015 at 08:11:11AM -0700, Daniel Berlin wrote:> On Thu, Oct 22, 2015 at 9:54 PM, Joerg Sonnenberger via llvm-dev < > llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote: > > > On Wed, Oct 21, 2015 at 09:10:40AM -0700, Daniel Berlin wrote: > > > Let's start with: In just about every country in the world, anyone > > > contributing on behalf of their company are exercising their employers > > > copyright (in most cases, even if they do it in their "spare time", since > > > most people misunderstand what the law grants them there). > > > > At least under German law, there is a clear separation between what I do > > during work time and outside. Ignoring questions like anti competition > > issues, my employer has no claims to what I do outside work time. > > Again, this is a common misconception, or so multiple german employment > lawyers have told me.You aren't even given a justification for that position, which makes it kind of difficult to have any reasonable form of discussion. Let me still clarify exactly what I mean and why this is relevant for the discussion. German UrhG§ 69b covers the "monetary" parts of copyright for employed developers. The employer is (exclusive) owner of those rights if the software was developed as part of the job or in fulfillment of work obligations. Unless my boss has explicitly told me to write a patch for LLVM to fix an issue I found at work, any such patch developed outside work hours is mine and mine alone. If I develop the fix outside work hours, the situation becomes a bit complicated when it comes to the exclusivity. Court rulings up to the BGH (German High Court) differ. General opinion is that that the employer may get an implicit permissions for using the software as far as the requirements of the job mandate it, but it is not generally transferable.> > > Both actual (They told me i could contribute), agent (I am also actually > > > authorized to contribute anyway), and apparent authority (Everyone else > > in > > > the community would normally believe i have authority to contribute, and > > > thus, there is apparent authority, regardless of whether Google said i > > > could contribute) would all bind Google when i contribute stuff. > > > > I don't think you will be able to convince a German court of that. > > > and I do. > With all due respect, these issues have been vetted with actual legal > counsel, and they disagree with you. > Strongly. > > When push comes to shove, i take their viewpoint over yours.A nice summary of acting authority under German law can be found in http://www.edk.de/2012/05/wer-unterschreibt-was-interne-und-externe-haftung-im-unternehmen/. It is especially useful how they stress the difference between internals rulings and external binding power of such agreements. So let me reverse this and ask you which kind of authority I would be using as employee to grant a patent license? Especially since I have not declared in any form that I *have* such an authority. Otherwise clearly BGB § 177 applies my employer can revoke the contract at any time. Joerg
Daniel Berlin via llvm-dev
2015-Oct-26 15:11 UTC
[llvm-dev] RFC: Improving license & patent issues in the LLVM community
On Sat, Oct 24, 2015 at 9:21 AM, Joerg Sonnenberger via llvm-dev < llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote:> On Fri, Oct 23, 2015 at 08:11:11AM -0700, Daniel Berlin wrote: > > On Thu, Oct 22, 2015 at 9:54 PM, Joerg Sonnenberger via llvm-dev < > > llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote: > > > > > On Wed, Oct 21, 2015 at 09:10:40AM -0700, Daniel Berlin wrote: > > > > Let's start with: In just about every country in the world, anyone > > > > contributing on behalf of their company are exercising their > employers > > > > copyright (in most cases, even if they do it in their "spare time", > since > > > > most people misunderstand what the law grants them there). > > > > > > At least under German law, there is a clear separation between what I > do > > > during work time and outside. Ignoring questions like anti competition > > > issues, my employer has no claims to what I do outside work time. > > > > Again, this is a common misconception, or so multiple german employment > > lawyers have told me. > > You aren't even given a justification for that position, which makes it > kind of difficult to have any reasonable form of discussion. Let me > still clarify exactly what I mean and why this is relevant for the > discussion.This is precisely because i'm *not* trying to have a discussion about this. Particularly on this mailing list. You seem to badly want to have a discussion about this. I've stated what numerous actual employment and IP lawyers who practice in germany have told me (multiple times, now, and in the past). You want to argue that it's wrong. Fine. I honestly don't care. But you should not expect me to take your opinion over theirs, even if you argue vociferously, because they are the folks who have tried to do these things in practice. I don't even have the same lawyers as the foundation, etc, and i'm sure they've vetted these issue as well. So i'm going to say: believe what you like. But i don't think it's reasonable to expect others to take the legal advice of random people on mailing lists over a multitude of their lawyers, or to try to address legal problems you think you see but lawyers tell them "this is not a problem". Maybe you differ here as well. Let me also point out you see to think your argument is one of "hey we should go with the CLA option or something else that binds individuals". However, that's not really what you are arguing in practice. What you are arguing in practice is really "It's super-dangerous to allow germans to contribute to your open source project". Most open source projects have neither licenses like Apache, nor CLA's. Your argument is essentially "I believe these open source projects get nothing from employers, etc". If that turns out to be correct, and a court was to find that in germany, the result is highly unlikely to be "the open source world realizes what a horrible mistake it has made and starts to use sane licensing and contributor agreements that cover german law better". Instead, the likely result would be "most open source projects would ban germans from contributing". -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20151026/44aac5a5/attachment.html>
Apparently Analagous Threads
- RFC: Improving license & patent issues in the LLVM community
- RFC: Improving license & patent issues in the LLVM community
- RFC #3: Improving license & patent issues in the LLVM community
- RFC #3: Improving license & patent issues in the LLVM community
- RFC #2: Improving license & patent issues in the LLVM community