So i quit my job today. Those that have left/quit what do i have to do legally.Obviously they own the work i did (php coding, photoshop, etc).Can they legally request passwords and such from me? do i have to give them passwords?[Edited on April 18, 2011 at 12:59 PM. Reason : g]
4/18/2011 12:57:32 PM
No legal expert here but once you are no longer being compensated you have no obligation to provide any more effort or services on your part. If they don't have a means or a process of knowledge transfer here thats on the company infrastructure for having you as a choke point on this and no one else who can cover.That said it might be just professional and avoid burning bridges and contacts to organize your exit a certain amount. Sometimes there are things that are just the cost of doing business so to speak.[Edited on April 18, 2011 at 1:02 PM. Reason : can't type]
4/18/2011 1:01:51 PM
They may or may not own it ... If you compiled snippets/classes outside of work, and just copied them into the actual work you did for the company, then you still can reuse the original work.But yeah, you really do have to give them everything you did that they were paying you to do. Passwords ... what do you mean ... like to their systems? Of course you do .... to your private email? no you do NOT.
4/18/2011 1:03:50 PM
4/18/2011 1:16:53 PM
4/18/2011 1:20:06 PM
they own the work. you dont need to provide them documentation.As long as you dont delete documentation or code you're fine.
4/18/2011 1:23:15 PM
4/18/2011 1:27:00 PM
I know there is some precedent about a California city IT guy not giving up passwords. I think it was San Diego or San Francisco or something similar. I think he had to give up the passwords, but i'm not sure.The bigger question is why would you not give them the passwords, you're a (presumably) grown ass man.
4/18/2011 1:28:56 PM
technically they should be deleting your accounts now that you've quit.
4/18/2011 1:36:55 PM
4/18/2011 1:37:14 PM
Kind of seems childish for you to withhold information if you could easily give it to them, and its something that they need.Obviously you're not going to get your job back whether you give them the passwords or not, so why not just take the high road and give them the information they need? Being a dick is a lousy way to treat a company assuming they were paying you a reasonable salary for some length of time.
4/18/2011 2:16:13 PM
^Nothing wrong with wanting to get paid for efforts though, If I was to get laid off right now I'd be very cordial but I would drop whatever I was doing and let them clean up the mess. In a perfect world I guess both the employee and the employer would develop an exit strategy for tying up lose ends before somebody is off the clock. Anyway every situation is different.At the end of the day probably just take 10 mins to put a spreadsheet or something with the account data you remember and let them figure out anything that requires more investigation than that.[Edited on April 18, 2011 at 2:30 PM. Reason : ]
4/18/2011 2:25:16 PM
4/18/2011 2:46:08 PM
4/18/2011 2:50:36 PM
4/18/2011 2:57:11 PM
From a practical standpoint its probably not worth burning the bridge. Especially if its an influential company in your industry. HR ladies hold grudges
4/18/2011 2:58:51 PM
Change all your passwords to something funny then hand them over. Good luck with the job search.
4/18/2011 7:15:40 PM
Yes they can legally request passwords and such from you.As an employee (ie before you quit) you were the holder of that information on behalf of the company. Before you quit, you need to transition that information to a new resource or location.Just mail them a certified letter listing all of the account information you were holding. I wouldn't email it, nor would I return to the site physically unless they want to pay you for that.
4/18/2011 7:24:46 PM
I took everyones advice and emailed a list. Just going to move on.
4/18/2011 8:14:06 PM
what did you sign? that's what you're bound to
4/18/2011 8:48:11 PM
I have not signed anything, when i was hired or today when i gave my resignation letter.
4/18/2011 9:32:54 PM
well you don't have to give up anything. that wouldn't hold up in a court of law.go ahead and burn some bridges. are you worried about not having a reference from your last job in your next employment search?
4/18/2011 9:51:33 PM
Clearly someone with the name "bonerjamz" should be listened to. Don't burn bridges, it always bites you in the ass later. You did the right thing to email them any pertinent information ... however, if they want you to train up a replacement, that clearly falls into the "hire me as a contractor" discussion.
4/18/2011 10:35:08 PM
bridge burning intended as sarcasm.
4/19/2011 5:38:49 AM
4/19/2011 7:03:31 AM
4/19/2011 7:36:29 AM
4/19/2011 9:05:54 AM
4/19/2011 10:58:05 AM
4/19/2011 11:02:04 AM
^ Second this highly. You sound like you set yourself up well with you managers, so take advantage of contracting.
4/19/2011 5:32:54 PM
$150/hr?I suddenly am wondering about losing my jerb...
4/19/2011 6:10:21 PM