Again, playing Devil's advocate, if someone is working in R&D for a company, what prevent them from patenting something they developed during office hours for themselves and claim the did it on their own time?
That's only theft in the sense that watching cat videos during office hours is theft of company-paid time. You should just owe them the money back from the hours you were skiving off rather than doing productive work for the company, not the value of the thing you created in the wasted time.
The guy using office time to develop his own game, and an identical guy using the same time to browse cat videos on youtube, have cost the company the exact same money. The only reason you'd punish the game developer worse than the cat-video-surfer (by hitting the developer up for the additional value he created) is pure spite - the idea that nobody can get ahead on your time.
Not at all. The difference is that the company is paying you to use your time to create things for it to own. The video-waster is not creating anything and is as such just ineffective. The one who creates stuff during the time in which he receives pay for creating stuff for the company but claims it as his own is breaching contract. The only reason they pay you for your time is as compensation for them later owning the result. It's the same if I pay a carpenter to add a room to my house. That they built the room doesn't mean they own it, as I paid them to create it for me.
Yeah, but if the carpenter wasn't working on
your house during that time, but instead was making some knick-knack for himself, could you honestly say
"hey i was paying for the time, that's my knick-knack now", or would you just ask for a refund for the time he didn't work on the thing you asked for? Both activities are "carpentry": the thing you're paying for, in the same sense that a person programming the program he's meant to make vs a person programming something in office hours the company never would have thought of in the first place.
Finally, this isn't even in question. The issue we are discussing here is the company laying claim to what you created in the hours they didn't pay you to create for them.
Well, i was responding
specifically to the hypothetical scenario presented by Sheb of that very thing. Take that up with Sheb.
Reelya, I meant the case where the guy develop something for the company, say a game developer working as a developer and creating a game during office hours as he was supposed to, and then filing it as his own IP.
Well then you've just moved the goalpost from what I was responding to, so my answer obviously can't encompass that. Anyway I hold to the fact that your own ideas are your own ideas. Most likely they're not going to be giving these low-level guys a lot of creative freedom anyway, they're going to give you very specific parameters to create the game they goddamn tell you to create ... they own the IP that you were meant to develop, and a reasonable effort on you part to follow the job instructions, not every single idea in your head. No more so than you'd own any and everything a carpenter decided to do on your time.