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I'm in discussions with a programmer to do contract work for my startup. He works full time programming at a Massachusetts company whose business is unrelated to mine and my project would be done in the programmer's spare time on his own equipment.

I have an agreement prepared that includes wording assigning the copyright and that programmer warrants no outside conflicts. However I feel it would be safer to have it in writing from his employer that he has permission to do the outside project.

Do you have any comments on taking this approach? How can I get a sample employer permission agreement to allow outside contract work? One that also releases claim to IP ownership to the work and that wouldn't require providing a lot of details about the project to the employer.

Do you know how Massachusetts labor code is regarding IP ownership by employers?

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I'd stay away from interaction with an employer. Rather twrite in the contract that the developer warrants that he has ownership and will assign it to you and that the developer will make you whole or some other legal term if the employer makes claims on the IP he is developing for you. In either case this is probably best handled with an attorney – TimJ Oct 18 '12 at 16:15
You should have the interaction with the employer.He can able to do the all the coding part. – catherinalucy Feb 25 at 9:51

1 Answer

I can only answer the most general of your questions:

Do you have any comments on taking this approach

First, a link to a phenomenal thread on the interesting relationship between employers, employees, and the work that employees do:

If I'm working at a company, do they have intellectual property rights to the stuff I do in my spare time?

Second, the comment you ask for: It is very wise to understand the mechanical factors (e.g. his contract with his employer) that might affect your ownership of the work your contractor does. But if you're really scrappy you may also want to consider the social factors (e.g. his relationship with his employer), which might make those mechanical factors either very important, or irrelevant.

I am not a lawyer, this is not legal advice.

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+1 for linking to the related thread. It's a good one. – CAD bloke Feb 13 at 4:18

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