W dniu 05.12.2023 o 19:31, Harry Wahl pisze:
I have designed and written many things. The vast majority of which entitles me
to no royalties or commissions. This is because any competent practitioner
could have created the same (or similar) thing.
That's how application programmers work. They are paid for their job.
Not only IT - the same apply to any engineers designing new buildings,
bridges, machines, engines, etc.
However, there are a very few things I have designed or written that merited recognition
as "intellectual property" and subsequently worth significant, special,
negotiated compensation. Very significant.
Yes and no. Even your very significant thing you designed can be sold.
It can be expensive, but it is subject of trade.
Last, but not least: You can sell anything you created, like (fictitious
case) Edison who sold his light bulb. But maybe the contract was signed
a priori - you work for Edison firm, developing the source of light.
Something to keep the discussion on topic somehow related to IBM-MAIN:
Last two weeks I've got a lot of job offerings for assembler coding
position. I don't know the company, but headhunters said the job office
is located in Warsaw (although most of the time the job is remote).
I don't know how much do they pay, because I gently refused. However
other job proposals in EU (mainframe) are usually at 40-60 €/hour level.
What's not funny, the companies located in Poland pay less than foreign
ones. Fortunately nowadays neither remote job is a problem, nor EU
borders are.
--
Radoslaw Skorupka
Lodz, Poland
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