5

Imagine you hire someone on a freelancing site to code a (highly) custom website or app with very specific functionality. After they complete the job, you pay them for their work and they hand over the source code to you. Who owns the code / IP? You or the developer? Let's assume the employer resides in the U.S and the freelancer resides in India or another 3rd world country.

I've checked this question and it seems that unless a contract was written explicitly stating that the Freelancer hands over all IP + code to the employer the code may actually "belong" to the Freelancer and the employer is merely able to "use it".

Does this means the Freelancer can re-use the entire code base and unveil an exact replica of your site with the intention to undercut you if he or she chooses? Or does it mean the Freelancer gets to re-use bits and pieces of code for another project?

Thanks

7
  • This s not a support channel for freelance crowd sourcing sites. If you have a question about such a site, you need to ask them or review their terms of service.
    – Scott
    Commented Jan 29, 2021 at 6:37
  • @Scott How is the question different than: freelancing.stackexchange.com/questions/1619/…
    – S.O.S
    Commented Jan 29, 2021 at 6:38
  • 6 years of site growth and changes. Often with stack sites, what is acceptable at one time becomes untenable. If questions regarding crowd source sites were allowed here they would quickly take over the entire stack.
    – Scott
    Commented Jan 29, 2021 at 6:39
  • @Scott I see. What if I just leave this part of the question: "So this means the Freelancer can unveil an exact replica of your site to compete with you if he so wishes" and remove the Freelancer.com part. Would that be acceptable?
    – S.O.S
    Commented Jan 29, 2021 at 6:41
  • Sure.. remove all aspects referring to crowd sourcing sites.
    – Scott
    Commented Jan 29, 2021 at 6:41

3 Answers 3

5

In any creative venture, be it artwork, fiction writing, markup writing, coding, music, film.... the "work" is copyrighted and owned by the creator the moment it is created.

There are only 9 ways the author "loses" rights to the work. William Fisher, of Harvard Law, has an excellent lecture on copyrights. Specifically Lecture 5 part 3 explains the 9 instances where authors do not retain the rights. There is a 10th... if you are an employee or otherwise under a work-for-hire agreement. And an 11th.. if the author gives them away.

So, to that end.. Yes the freelancer owns their creation and can do with it what they want.

Ethical freelancers aren't going to reuse something in whole. It's not uncommon to pull a part form here or there to flesh out something new, but direct duplication is often something most ethical freelancers aren't interesting in doing.

If you fear replication of something you've paid for, a simple solution is to have a contract which transfers partial or all rights of the product from the author to the client/buyer. Most freelancers are more than willing to enter such agreements, however costs may be higher given this factor. Barring such an agreement, the author is free to use the work in any manner they see fit, even if it upsets or bothers the client who paid for the work initially.


It should be noted that freelancers do not have an "employer". Freelancers have clients, not "employers".

  • Employers tell workers when to work, how to work, what to work on, provide tools for completion of that work, etc.

  • Freelancers define their own hours, how a project is completed, what projects they will work on, and use their own tools to complete those projects.

Definitions matter.

Simply because someone pays me to complete something does not make them my "employer", much the same way if I were to hire a plumber to fix my drains, that would not make the plumber my "employee".

The employee <> employer relationship is always a work-for-hire arrangement and the employer owns everything created by the employee.

Independent contracting is often a freelance position. However, there can be contracts defining ownership which can equate to a more work-for-hire agreement in which the contractor (client) owns everything created by the contractee (worker).

11
  • What if the employer played a big role in shaping the function, vision, direction and success of the entire program - wouldn't that give the employer a good chunk of the IP? I mean software isn't written in a vacuum.. It's not like asking someone to write a book and then sitting back on the couch until the guy finishes his work.. it's like someone who plays an active and critical role in character / story development.. are you so sure that in this case the guy who writes the book (or software) owns the whole IP?
    – S.O.S
    Commented Feb 1, 2021 at 4:46
  • @S.O.S input, suggestions, ideas, feature requests are all not "when", "what", and "how" to work... Of course a client must provide some direction, but the idea or desire alone does not constitute ownership. One cannot copyright any idea. It's only the implementation of an idea which can be copyrighted and owned.
    – Scott
    Commented Feb 1, 2021 at 7:29
  • Hire me to paint a picture of a turtle... sure it's your idea... but I do the painting on my time, with my tools.. and it's my artwork. I can then choose to either sell you the rights to the artwork or not. But you don't own anything other than what I'm willing to sell you - which may be merely usage rights, not ownership.
    – Scott
    Commented Feb 1, 2021 at 7:36
  • A good example of all this is Zuckerbrg and Facebook... He took an idea from someone else, built it with their input along the way, then decided to keep it. Sure there were legal settlements later (but no definitive wrongdoing on Zuckerberg's part). Ultimately, who owns Facebook now?
    – Scott
    Commented Feb 1, 2021 at 8:54
  • 1) According to ndtv.com the twins accused Mark Zuckerberg of "intellectual property theft", saying he "illegally used source code intended for the website he was hired to create." "Mark Zuckerberg, who said he hadn't used a single code meant for Harvard Connection in Facebook, finally had to agree to an out of court settlement."
    – S.O.S
    Commented Feb 1, 2021 at 18:11
1

Several answers here assume US law. The OP asked specifically about international law. (I am not an expert in international law.)

A better way of looking at this situation is to ask how enforceable are any rights?

In the US, contracts and rights to software realistically have power to the extent that you are willing to go to court to protect them. If you can't afford to sue to protect copyright or violations of the contract, the rights and contract are gone. Years ago, my lawyer told me to walk away from any dispute where I couldn't get back at least $20K (that figure is higher now) because that is how much he would charge me to do such a suit.

In this situation, the OP asked about someone in another country. How enforceable is any contract or "rights to IP" in another country? It is common knowledge to hardware designers that doing business in or having hardware built in certain countries means that someone in that country will copy the design. This is true even though contracts have been signed to prevent such.

In this case, how willing is the OP to go to that country to file a suit? Would the OP win? And if one wins the suit, how much could one realistically get from that person? If the person being sued has a net worth less than $10,000, what would be the value of doing all that effort? It would cost far more than you could get back.

So, we do best to find ethical people to do business with, trust they will honor your IP, and verify by smaller projects that they actually will.

0

Yes unless a contract is written and payment fulfilled. Anything that freelancer creates belongs to the freelancer not the buyer.

This is one big legal difference to freelancing and employment.

Yes without a contract the freelancers are legally entitled to sell the code (it’s not yours) to anybody else.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.