(Follow-up to my mail from a while back)

We (RIM) have started using a slightly modified version of Apache's ICLA &
CCLA for our nascient Open Source projects.  So far, so good. But there  is
an angle where I could benefit again from your experience.

Some employee contracts have a variation of a statement that says "IP
generated by the employee in <different conditions> is owned by the
company".  Ignoring how/whether local laws (like California) void this... a
company can argue that they don't want their employees to sign ICLAs b/c
they don't own IP and thus only CCLAs are applicable.

ASF [1] explicitly indicates that its requiring both ICLA and CCLAs:
[1] http://www.apache.org/licenses/#clas

"Note that a Corporate CLA does not remove the need for every developer to
sign their own CLA as an individual, to cover any of their contributions
which are not owned by the corporation signing the CCLA."

Another argument for requiring both ICLA and CCLA is to cover contributions
from the individual after he or she has stopped working for the corporation
that signed the CCLA - without relying on the cooperation of the employee or
the employer to notify ASF of the change.


Am I interpreting correctly the practice used by ASF on this area?
Do you ever get challenged?  What do you do if you are?
Do you have a list of CCLA signatories anywhere? I only see the ICLA list.

Thanks,
  Eduardo

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