A few friends and I have an idea for a simple iPhone game and are planning to develop it fairly soon.
There is a clause in our contracts (we all work for the same company) that states all ideas/copyrightable works/technical know how we come up with whilst working for the company is owned by the company. It also states that we will do anything required, at the companies cost, to transfer ownership of all works, related or otherwise, to the company.
I understand this is fully necessary so that we can't sue the company for something we do for them after they make millions selling it but don't think it seems fair/enforceable for ideas unrelated to the companies business. For example, by the word of the contract, if I composed a song during my own time and sold it, my tech company could claim ownership of it.
In my real example, the difference isn't as great as for music, but we are developing a game for iPhone and my company are only interested in IT services for massive organizations and governments. Sure, software is software, but they would never release a game...
So, my question is this, is a catch all clause that couldn't actually be enforced in my scenario or is it binding to the letter?
If it's cut and dry and the employer would always win if they decided to enforce it we will likely seek written permission for an exemption for the field of games before releasing. If they decline and we still want to do it, one or even all of us, would have to consider taking a career break or resigning before developing/releasing.
I found lots of information on this for various states in the US but didn't find anything relevant to the UK.
Any advice/suggestions/links to relevant material would be much appreciated.
Thanks
There is a clause in our contracts (we all work for the same company) that states all ideas/copyrightable works/technical know how we come up with whilst working for the company is owned by the company. It also states that we will do anything required, at the companies cost, to transfer ownership of all works, related or otherwise, to the company.
I understand this is fully necessary so that we can't sue the company for something we do for them after they make millions selling it but don't think it seems fair/enforceable for ideas unrelated to the companies business. For example, by the word of the contract, if I composed a song during my own time and sold it, my tech company could claim ownership of it.
In my real example, the difference isn't as great as for music, but we are developing a game for iPhone and my company are only interested in IT services for massive organizations and governments. Sure, software is software, but they would never release a game...
So, my question is this, is a catch all clause that couldn't actually be enforced in my scenario or is it binding to the letter?
If it's cut and dry and the employer would always win if they decided to enforce it we will likely seek written permission for an exemption for the field of games before releasing. If they decline and we still want to do it, one or even all of us, would have to consider taking a career break or resigning before developing/releasing.
I found lots of information on this for various states in the US but didn't find anything relevant to the UK.
Any advice/suggestions/links to relevant material would be much appreciated.
Thanks