On 14 May 2025, at 19:54, ToddAndMargo via perl6-users <perl6-us...@perl.org>
wrote:
On 5/14/25 5:13 AM, Lars Noodén wrote:
On 5/14/25 06:54, Clifton Wood wrote:
So for sure you own all of the code*prior* to your modifications. As Liz
has stated, unless you discuss things with the customer and *he chooses to
relinquish his rights in writing*, then your modifications belong to him.
It mainly depends on the contract. Read what is written there in the contract
you have for the task before anything else.
/Lars
The contract was verbal. His instructions were to get
everything back up and running and as soon a possible.
He was not concerned with the details. He just wanted
his stuff up and working again. And fast.
That was two serves, Internet, firewall, and make
everything talk to each other properly for the new
and old point of sale software to work with all
the servers and workstations.
On 5/14/25 11:15 AM, Elizabeth Mattijsen wrote:
> If you were paid in cash, I wouldn't worry about anything and
consider the code yours.
>
Hi Mattijsen,
The parts that concern him can not be reused anyway.
I went to ask him about it yesterday whilst I was at
his facility. He had left for a week long fishing
trip.
If I code something for somebody, I will probably do
the coding on my own dime from now on, unless they
specifically contract me for it.
Thank you for the help!
-T