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<blockquote data-quote="Hussar" data-source="post: 8364059" data-attributes="member: 22779"><p>So, [USER=7023840]@Snarf Zagyg[/USER] - I read the other thread. And, am I understanding correctly in saying that the contract in this specific instance (I never meant to be speaking in general terms, but about this specifically although I think I may have drifted a bit) isn't actually doing what it's supposed to do? Or, to put it another way, I was right to question the base assumption that this boilerplate language was doing what it was supposed to do?</p><p></p><p>Or, am I missing something among the condescension and patronizing tone?</p><p></p><p>From my admittedly totally armchair lawyer position, it seems to me that the need to protect the company against the contest entrants could pretty easily be served without taking the rights away from the creatives. As I said, the software exists right now, for free, on every Windows 10 machine, to double check against future products. Is this sort of boilerplate actually necessary since it doesn't protect the company at all from being sued by anyone else and it doesn't seem terribly difficult to not copy work that was already submitted to you.</p><p></p><p>Or, again, have I missed something in my bumbling, uneducated way?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Hussar, post: 8364059, member: 22779"] So, [USER=7023840]@Snarf Zagyg[/USER] - I read the other thread. And, am I understanding correctly in saying that the contract in this specific instance (I never meant to be speaking in general terms, but about this specifically although I think I may have drifted a bit) isn't actually doing what it's supposed to do? Or, to put it another way, I was right to question the base assumption that this boilerplate language was doing what it was supposed to do? Or, am I missing something among the condescension and patronizing tone? From my admittedly totally armchair lawyer position, it seems to me that the need to protect the company against the contest entrants could pretty easily be served without taking the rights away from the creatives. As I said, the software exists right now, for free, on every Windows 10 machine, to double check against future products. Is this sort of boilerplate actually necessary since it doesn't protect the company at all from being sued by anyone else and it doesn't seem terribly difficult to not copy work that was already submitted to you. Or, again, have I missed something in my bumbling, uneducated way? [/QUOTE]
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