> To wit:

As an appetizer, also consider the new Google 10^100 contest TOS

   http://www.project10tothe100.com/tos.html

> you retain ownership of any intellectual and industrial property rights
> (including moral rights) you have in and to your submission.

but...

> you grant Google, its subsidiaries, agents and partner companies, a perpetual,
> irrevocable, worldwide, royalty-free, and non-exclusive license to use, 
> reproduce,
> adapt, modify, publish, distribute, publicly perform, create a derivative work
> from, and publicly display your submission and the proposal provided therein

Huh, where does that leave ownership? I not understand, I simple
developer. ;-)


On Oct 14, 12:37 pm, Mark Murphy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> To wit:
>
> 1. Listing an app in the App Market will undoubtedly require some sort
> of legal agreement, ranging from a site Terms of Use all the way to a
> real contract. Every OHA member I've ever dealt with doesn't understand
> what they're doing with such documents -- they think such agreements are
> acts of Congress, rather than the marketing brochures they really are.
> Hence, the agreements to use the App Market, to paraphrase Hobbes, will
> likely be nasty, brutish, and long. That usually requires review by
> legal counsel, which can't happen until the agreement is published.
> Attorneys aren't known for blazing speed, so firms really should be
> working on that now...but they can't, apparently because there are no
> phones available.

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