Re: Copyrights
Fifth, documents written as "work-for-hire" automatically belong to whatever</snip>
entity hired the writer, not the writer.
I have a question about this rule. How is ownership figured in the case of winning awards? I ask this question because a few years ago, a former employer submitted a multi-media product that was completely created by a consultant they hired to a prestigious tech writing competition. In the application they submitted, they made no mention of the consultant that did all the work- despite the fact that none of the employed writers had even heard of the software the consultant used on the interactive product.
If the work of a consultant belongs entirely to the entity who hired that consultant, can the technical writing department of that entity win writing awards for that consultant's work? Should the company acknowledge that a consultant wrote it, or should they even submit the work at all? How are awards committees supposed to know if a work was created by a consultant or by an employee of a company?
The company did not win, by the way, they got a 'runner-up' type award.
Thanks for your thoughts!
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