Quote:
Originally Posted by Unregistered
You are quite right. Strangely, it is the tuition centres that safeguard their materials and prevent it from being shared in public domains. Who wants to create resources when it does not even belong to them or credit given when due? Who wants to write a book knowing that it belongs to the readers? Singapore copyright laws should take account of teachers right
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Sounds like you don't understand copyright law nor employer employee relationship. It's not just teachers. Unless there's a specific contract, what an employee works on in the course of their work belongs to the employer. A software engineer can't claim the code is theirs just becayse they wrote it while writing an app/program for their employer