It seems Google largely catered to employees that contribute to specific projects repeatedly, and not people like me who just send random one-off patches. I'm good at fixing problems in unknown code, I don't go work on a single codebase for long periods of time.
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And so I resolved to give zero shits from that point on about their IP ownership policies, and did whatever I wanted in my spare time. If you work for Google (Ireland especially) you should check your employment contract carefully. You might be able to do the same.
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I hope Google's employees are able to unionize and this is one of the changes they should demand. No company should be able to own things you do in your spare time, especially if they don't relate at all to your job description (regardless of whether they do to someone else's).
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When were you a Googler? My contract agreed with the other wording. I wonder if it got changed at some point in response to legal pressure -- IIRC, CA courts agree with this interpretation and not the stricter one.
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OTOH, domain knowledge acquired as a result of your employment does count as using company resources. (And even if it didn't, trade secret law would apply.) I'm actually amazed IARC let my project through; it was a direct competitor to Translate.
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