<DIV> An author can keep the rights, but they do have to be careful (as you pointed out) that the employer has not worked ownership of the work into the contract. However, I seem to have a faint recollection of something about a 30 year personal creative work exemption from contractual liscence, but I'm not sure exactly how that worked or even what it is anymore. Also, this exemption can be signed away. That was why I had asked. When I had done my writing and sold (gave) it to TSR and R-Tal, I kept the rights to one (worthless) piece. If Tucker and his fiends ever rise up in D&D 3E, I can complain. lol<BR><BR><B><I>Wout Broere <broere@powersandperils.org></I></B> wrote:</DIV>
<BLOCKQUOTE class=replbq style="PADDING-LEFT: 5px; MARGIN-LEFT: 5px; BORDER-LEFT: #1010ff 2px solid">At 12:40 PM 3/12/2004, you wrote:<BR>>Author who creates a given work for hire does not have rights to it. They <BR>>velong to the company. In this case, have been assigned from Hasbro to <BR>>their sub-company, Wizards of the West Coast.<BR><BR>Funny how copyright laws differ in different countries. Even though the <BR>university pays me to write articles, the result is copyright by me and not <BR>the university I know, because the university tried to get a clause in the <BR>employment contract giving them the copyright, and all hell broke loose. <BR>Now this is Dutch Law, and I expect Richard had an explicit clause in his <BR>contract transferring copyright to Avalon Hill, so the point is probably moot.<BR><BR>Now I have barely time to keep the list up to date at times, so not sure <BR>how much time I can invest in a redo of P&P, but I am certainly interested. !
<BR>Ask
me again when the plan gets more shape.<BR><BR>Wout<BR>Wout Broere broere@powersandperils.org<BR>P&P Website: http://www.powersandperils.org/ <BR><BR><BR><BR>_______________________________________________<BR>pnp mailing list<BR>pnp@abroere.xs4all.nl<BR>http://abroere.xs4all.nl/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/pnp</BLOCKQUOTE>