@zkat Right! Yeah, I prefer using copyleft when I can. It's unfortunate how a lot of orgs won't touch anything but MIT licenses.
Are you an EU citizen? In that case „you have to give up all your code“ is a convenient lie told to you by capitalists. As EU citizen all you can give, is a comprehensive license to your work. You always own the copyright. Even if paid for the work. If a former employer doesn't want you to use your own work, they have to compensate you. Even after firing you.
Obviously practical issues arise from you not having a comprehensive license for your colleagues' work.
@taschenorakel @zkat In my case I'm in Canada and from what I recall my contracts say the company hiring me owns all output. 😅 That's good to hear that the EU has such laws in place though!
@mauve @taschenorakel @zkat Technically what the law says is/should be more important than the language in your contract. There is rarely any downside to claiming outrageous things in a contract.
@LovesTha @taschenorakel Got any Canadian labor law / copyright lawyers you'd recommend? 😅
@taschenorakel @mauve @zkat Are you sure about that? In the Netherlands, there is law that states that (if not otherwise agreed in contract) the copyright on anything you make while being employed falls directly to your employer (which even includes things you make in unpaid time if they are things that you could also have been told to make for your employer). See e.g.https://www.iusmentis.com/auteursrecht/nl/vvv/maker/ (Dutch).
@mauve I’m talking a lot about permissive vs copyleft here btw