Common use of Client Owns All Work Product Clause in Contracts

Client Owns All Work Product. As part of this job, the Designer is creating “work product” for the Client. To avoid confusion, work product is the finished product, as well as drafts, notes, materials, mockups, hardware, designs, inventions, patents, code, and anything else that the Designer works on—that is, conceives, creates, designs, develops, invents, works on, or reduces to practice—as part of this project, whether before the date of this Contract or after. The Designer hereby gives the Client this work product once the Client pays for it in full. This means the Designer is giving the Client all of its rights, titles, and interests in and to the work product (including intellectual property rights), and the Client will be the sole owner of it. The Client can use the work product however it wants or it can decide not to use the work product at all. The Client, for example, can modify, destroy, or sell it, as it sees fit.

Appears in 4 contracts

Samples: Independent Contractor Agreement, Freelancer Contract Bluemonk Agency, Design Contract

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Client Owns All Work Product. As part of this job, the Designer Contractor is creating “work product” for the Client. To avoid confusion, work product is the finished product, as well as drafts, notes, materials, mockups, hardware, designs, inventions, patents, code, and anything else that the Designer Contractor works on—that is, conceives, creates, designs, develops, invents, works on, or reduces to practice—as part of this project, whether before the date of this Contract or after. The Designer Contractor hereby gives the Client this work product once during the Client pays for it in fullproject. This means the Designer Contractor is giving the Client all of its rights, titles, and interests in and to the work product (including intellectual property rights), and the Client will be the sole owner of it. The Client can use the work product however it wants or it can decide not to use the work product at all. The Client, for example, can modify, destroy, or sell it, as it sees fit.

Appears in 3 contracts

Samples: Independent Contractor Agreement, Independent Contractor Agreement, Independent Contractor Agreement

Client Owns All Work Product. As part of this job, the Designer Contractor is creating “work product” for the Client. To avoid confusion, work product is the finished product, as well as drafts, notes, materials, mockups, hardware, designs, inventions, patents, code, and anything else that the Designer Contractor works on—that is, conceives, creates, designs, develops, invents, works on, or reduces to practice—as part of this project, whether before the date of this Contract or after. The Designer Contractor hereby gives the Client this work product once the Client pays for it in full. This means the Designer Contractor is giving the Client all of its rights, titles, and interests in and to the work product (including intellectual property rights), and the Client will be the sole owner of it. The Client can use the work product however it wants or it can decide not to use the work product at all. The Client, for example, can modify, destroy, or sell it, as it sees fit.

Appears in 2 contracts

Samples: Independent Contractor Agreement, Design Contract

Client Owns All Work Product. As part of this job, the Designer Consultant is creating “work product” for the Client. To avoid confusion, work product is the finished product, as well as drafts, notes, materials, mockups, hardware, designs, inventions, patents, code, and anything else that the Designer Consultant works on—that is, conceives, creates, designs, develops, invents, works on, or reduces to practice—as part of this project, whether before the date of this Contract or after. The Designer Consultant hereby gives the Client this work product once the Client pays for it in full. This means the Designer Consultant is giving the Client all of its rights, titles, and interests in and to the work product (including intellectual property rights), and the Client will be the sole owner of it. The Consultant also waives its moral right to the integrity of the work product. The Client can use the work product however it wants or it can decide not to use the work product at all. The Client, for example, can modify, destroy, or sell it, as it sees fit.

Appears in 1 contract

Samples: Opening of Branch Office

Client Owns All Work Product. As part of this job, the Designer Software Developer is creating “work product” for the Client. To avoid confusion, work product is the finished product, as well as drafts, notes, materials, mockups, hardware, designs, inventions, patents, code, and anything else that the Designer Software Developer works on—that is, conceives, creates, designs, develops, invents, works on, or reduces to practice—as part of this project, whether before the date of this Contract or after. The Designer Software Developer hereby gives the Client this work product once the Client pays for it in full. This means the Designer Software Developer is giving the Client all of its rights, titles, and interests in and to the work product (including intellectual property rights), and the Client will be the sole owner of it. The Client can use the work product however it wants or it can decide not to use the work product at all. The Client, for example, can modify, destroy, or sell it, as it sees fit.. 2.2

Appears in 1 contract

Samples: Software Agreement

Client Owns All Work Product. As part of this job, the Designer is creating “work product” for the Client. To avoid confusion, work product is the finished product, as well as drafts, notes, materials, mockups, hardware, designs, inventions, patents, code, and anything else that the Designer works on—that is, conceives, creates, designs, develops, invents, works on, or reduces to practice—as part of this project, whether before the date of this Contract or after. The Designer hereby gives the Client this work product once the Client pays for it in full. This means the Designer is giving the Client all of its rights, titles, and interests in and to the work product (including intellectual property rights), and the Client will be the sole owner of it. The Client can use the work product however it wants or it can decide not to use the work product at all. The Client, for example, can modify, destroy, or sell it, as it sees fit.. 2.2

Appears in 1 contract

Samples: static1.squarespace.com

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Client Owns All Work Product. As part of this job, the Designer Consultant is creating the "work product" for the Client. To avoid confusion, work product is the finished productcompleted work, as well as drafts, notes, materials, internal processes, advertisements, wording, marketing phrases, mockups, hardware, designs, inventions, patents, code, emails, illustrations, email content and anything else that the Designer works on—that is, conceives, creates, designs, develops, invents, works on, or reduces to practice—Consultant creates as part of this project, whether before the date of this Contract or after. The Designer Consultant hereby gives the Client this work product once the Client pays for it in full. This means the Designer Consultant is giving the Client all of its rights, titles, and interests in and to the work product (including intellectual property rights), and the Client will be the sole owner of it. The Client can use the work product however it wants or it can decide not to use the work product at all. The Client, for example, can modify, destroy, or sell it, as it sees fit.fit.2.2

Appears in 1 contract

Samples: Interior Design Proposal PDF

Client Owns All Work Product. As part of this job, the Designer Contractor is creating “work product” for the Client. To avoid confusion, work product is the finished product, as well as drafts, notes, materials, mockups, hardware, designs, inventions, patents, code, and anything else that the Designer Contractor works on—that is, conceives, creates, designs, develops, invents, works on, or reduces to practice—as part of this project, whether before the date of this Contract or after. The Designer Contractor hereby gives the Client this work product once during the Client pays for it in fullproject. This means the Designer Contractor is giving the Client all of its rights, titles, and interests in and to the work product (including intellectual property rights), and the Client will be the sole owner of it. The Client can use the work product however it wants or it can decide not to use the work product at all. The Client, for example, can modify, destroy, or Client Contractor sell it, as it sees fit.

Appears in 1 contract

Samples: Independent Contractor Agreement

Client Owns All Work Product. As part of this job, the Designer Contractor is creating “work product” for the Client. To avoid confusion, work product is the finished product, as well as drafts, notes, materials, mockupsmock-ups, hardware, designs, inventions, patents, code, and anything else that the Designer Contractor works on—that is, conceives, creates, designs, develops, invents, works on, or reduces to practice—as part of this project, whether before the date of this Contract or after. The Designer Contractor hereby gives the Client this work product once the Client pays for it in full. This means the Designer Contractor is giving the Client all of its rights, titles, and interests in and to the work product (including intellectual property rights), and the Client will be the sole owner of it. The Contractor also waives its moral right to the integrity of the work product. The Client can use the work product however it wants or it can decide not to use the work product at all. The Client, for example, can modify, destroy, or sell it, as it sees fit.

Appears in 1 contract

Samples: Photography Contract

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