Steven D'Aprano <st...@pearwood.info> wrote: > Duncan wrote: > > Alan Meyer posted on Mon, 21 Feb 2011 10:45:55 -0800 as > > excerpted: > [...] > >> Since I'm paid for the work that I do I have no grounds for > >> complaint. If they want to pay me to do work that they take > >> credit for, I understand that. I'm content to take the > >> money and do the work. But I sure do appreciate the need to > >> credit open source developers. > > > It occurs to me that especially as a consultant, you could > > write up your contract to specify that you /do/ get credit, > > perhaps charging extra to waive that requirement... > > Perhaps a better (or at least more fun) approach would be to > charge one rate for support and bug fixes for your own work, > and double for fixing other people's bugs. Then when the client > comes to you with a bug fix, you can say "Well, according to > the copyright notice, you wrote this, so I'm going to have to > charge you double" :) > > > -- Steven
It's fun to dream about things like this. In reality, of course, I'm usually content if the client hands me a contract I can sign without gagging. There was only one case where I just couldn't bring myself to do it and one other where I convinced the client to change it. As for me writing the contract and handing it to him, I'm a hardworking but pretty obscure consultant, not a celebrity programmer like Guido van Rossum or Linus Torvalds. I don't think I could bear to watch the client's lawyers spilling their martinis, rolling on the floor, laughing, and pointing at me. Alan _______________________________________________ Pan-users mailing list Pan-users@nongnu.org http://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/pan-users