Intellectual Property Clause
Determines who owns IP created or used under the contract, and how background and foreground IP are treated.
Ce que c'est
An IP clause allocates ownership of intellectual property: pre-existing "background" IP each party brings, and "foreground" IP created during the work. It states whether deliverables are assigned to the customer or licensed, and handles moral rights and third-party materials.
Pourquoi c'est important
IP is often the most valuable asset a contract touches. If ownership is unclear, the customer may not be able to use what it paid for, or the supplier may lose reusable assets. Dutch law requires a written deed for transfer of most IP rights.
Comment l'appliquer
- Distinguish background IP (retained) from foreground IP (assigned or licensed).
- Use a written assignment deed where the law requires it for transfer.
- Address moral rights, third-party and open-source components.
- Grant the non-owner a licence wide enough to use the deliverables in practice.
Exemple de formulation
All intellectual property rights in the Deliverables created under this Agreement shall transfer to the Customer upon full payment, while each party retains ownership of its pre-existing background IP.
Conseils de négociation
- • Suppliers should retain reusable tools and methods, granting only a deliverable licence.
- • Customers paying for bespoke work should insist on full assignment of foreground IP.
Pièges courants
- • Relying on a clause that "assigns" IP without the written deed Dutch law requires.
- • Ignoring open-source licence terms embedded in delivered software.
Références juridiques
- Aw art. 2 Copyright Act: transfer requires a deed (Auteurswet) Droit néerlandais
- BW 3:84 Assignment of property rights (levering) Droit néerlandais
Sauf mention contraire, les références renvoient au droit néerlandais (Burgerlijk Wetboek, le Code civil néerlandais) ; les instruments de l'UE tels que le RGPD s'appliquent dans toute l'UE. Il s'agit d'informations générales, pas de conseils juridiques. D'autres juridictions traitent ces concepts différemment. Vérifiez le texte en vigueur et votre situation avec un avocat qualifié.
Foire aux questions
Questions courantes sur cette clause.