3 Answers
Our laws recognize employers as the owners of the work of their employees. If you produce or invent anything while in the employment of another it can be legally argued that what you did belongs to the business. When you work for someone ( person, company, corporation etc.) your inventions are owned by your employer. For 5 years after having been employed there or as a result of training your invention is theirs. Universities have similar entitlements. Our congress has made every citizen of the USA a slave to industry with no rights as a result of the preferential treatment given business in our courts. When my invention of an electronic gadget brought a nomination for the Nobel Prize in physics I recognized a flaw in the process. The patent application requires the inventors name. Since others in the company put their name there instead of mine, I appealed to the US Patent office to recognize their practice as theft since prizes and gratuities from sources outside of the corporation did not belong to the corporation but, in this case, to me. When the patent office recognized the practice as theft, the USPTO recognized the history of the practice and withdrew 7000 patents from AT&T resulting in the break-up of the monopoly. The laws have changed and the Nobel Prize people are very careful about awarding the actual inventors. Perhaps you have noticed how few prizes are awarded in the US any more. The practice of legally stealing ideas from the little guy assures Corporate America that your talent will not set you free from their chains…we are not free, we are employed.
13 years ago. Rating: 2 | |