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Paul Fenton
For those of you out there who get paid to develop web sites, I'd like
some opinions. Here's the scenario...
You contract with a client to develop his web site. He provides you
with the content, photos, etc. and you package it all up and develop
his site and publish it. He's thrilled and pays your fee and you go
along, charging him for hosting (on a commercial site), the occasional
edit, etc.
Now, business turns bad and he says, "Turn it off. I'm done." You
cancel the hosting service and delete the content on the server. You
maintain a full copy on your local computer, however.
Now he comes back a couple months later and says, "I'm back in
business and Joe Blow here is going to do my web site. I want all my
pages, pictures, etc. Zip them and email to me."
Question... Who owns those pages that YOU developed?
Do you have an obligation to hand them over or, are they your Work
Product and while he has a right to the content (the words, pictures),
he has no right to the "package" that you created, that he paid for?
This is where I am right now and to complicate matters, it's a
"friend" who screwed me in a previous business deal.
What would you do?
Paul Fenton
some opinions. Here's the scenario...
You contract with a client to develop his web site. He provides you
with the content, photos, etc. and you package it all up and develop
his site and publish it. He's thrilled and pays your fee and you go
along, charging him for hosting (on a commercial site), the occasional
edit, etc.
Now, business turns bad and he says, "Turn it off. I'm done." You
cancel the hosting service and delete the content on the server. You
maintain a full copy on your local computer, however.
Now he comes back a couple months later and says, "I'm back in
business and Joe Blow here is going to do my web site. I want all my
pages, pictures, etc. Zip them and email to me."
Question... Who owns those pages that YOU developed?
Do you have an obligation to hand them over or, are they your Work
Product and while he has a right to the content (the words, pictures),
he has no right to the "package" that you created, that he paid for?
This is where I am right now and to complicate matters, it's a
"friend" who screwed me in a previous business deal.
What would you do?
Paul Fenton