The people I worked with, including engineers and lawyers from all three main branches of Nintendo (NCL, NOA, NERD) were largely very nice people. Communication was formal. Sadly, the project was hampered by corporate policy, politics, and mistrust, as often happens.
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I was able to accomplish some smaller goals, and give advice on direction, but I sadly wasn't able to have high impact because the environment didn't allow me to. This was, as usual, largely due to management, not the people I worked with directly.
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The leaked documents show some of these same problems internal to Nintendo. They paint a story of a large multinational with communication, focus, and trust issues across cultures and teams, which is sadly common. (Read beyond the ninja docs, there's more)
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Remember, corporations are made of people, and those people are often trying to do good. It's the corporate structure, and the people in specific (usually higher) positions that end up making things go wrong. So keep that in mind as you read through the leaked docs.
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What about the stalking? Well, way back in the Wii days, they were already using similar tactics. After bushing tried to responsibly disclose (!) an issue, Jodi Daugherty, former director/lawyer at NOA, tracked down his work phone and called him, as an intimidatory tactic.
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This approach clearly continued with neimod in 2013. It seems things changed sometime between then and when they approached me in 2015. All of my conversations were cordial, starting over email, then phone and in-person. Nobody ever came anywhere near my house as far as I know.
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I want to think that they changed their approach at some point (partially due to personnel changes). At least that's the impression I got. I didn't have any direct interactions with Jodi, and her LinkedIn says she retired in 2016. Maybe things are better now. They were with me.
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If you're ever offered an NDA, this isn't an EULA. You get to negotiate the terms. The only reason I can talk about this now is I insisted on the expiry date, and clauses that designate info I had prior, and info published through no fault of my own (this leak), as out of scope.
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Replying to @marcan42
It’s so interesting people always say that about NDAs but they are absolutely not in my industry sadly. It’s basically sign them or don’t get the job.
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Replying to @paviro_
That is the case if you have no leverage, i.e. if you're just a random person applying and they have 12 others lining up to sign the NDA. Thus it's a self-fulfilling prophecy. If *everyone* negotiated NDAs then it wouldn't be an issue.
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That said, if it's for a smaller corporation as part of a full-time job, there is another approach that works sometimes. Twice I have "forgotten" to sign NDAs "required" for a normal full-time job and nobody followed up. Clearly not very important if nobody cared.
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Replying to @marcan42
Hahahaha I do that with contracts all the time
I often get them like a day before shooting or even while already shooting. If I don’t like something in it I take my time to sign or not sign it
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