• Hey, guest user. Hope you're enjoying NeoGAF! Have you considered registering for an account? Come join us and add your take to the daily discourse.

Amazon Drops ‘Draconian’ Policy on Making Games After Work Hours

kingfey

Banned
Amazon Drops ‘Draconian’ Policy on Making Games After Work Hours
By
Jason Schreier
August 12, 2021, 1:48 PM EDT
  • Memo from Game Studios chief suggests rules were too broad
  • Company previously claimed rights to games made outside work

Amazon.com Inc. withdrew a set of staff guidelines that claimed ownership rights to video games made by employees after work hours and dictated how they could distribute them, according to a company email reviewed by Bloomberg.
The longstanding policies within Amazon Game Studios had drawn criticism on social media over the last month after a Google engineer posted about them. Some game developers described the rules as “draconian.”

The old policies mandated that employees of the games division who were moonlighting on projects would need to use Amazon products, such as Amazon Web Services, and sell their games on Amazon digital stores. It also gave the company “a royalty free, worldwide, fully paid-up, perpetual, transferable license” to intellectual property rights of any games developed by its employees.

https://www.bloomberg.com/screentime?in_source=postr_index
Amazon said Thursday it was immediately eliminating the rules. “These policies were originally put in place over a decade ago when we had a lot less information and experience than we do today, and as a result, the policies were written quite broadly,” Mike Frazzini, the Amazon Game Studios boss, wrote in the email to staff.
A spokesman for Amazon declined to comment on the email.
The games division has struggled practically since its inception in 2012 and can hardly afford another reputational hit. It has never released a successful game, and some current and former employees have placed the blame with Frazzini. Bloomberg reported in January that Frazzini had hired veteran game developers and executives but largely dismissed or ignored their advice

 
Last edited:

Soodanim

Gold Member
I’m not familiar with American contract law. Would a contract like that have stood up in court? There’s broad, and there’s that. It’s not exactly reasonable.
 

toidy

Neo Member
This isn't unique to amazon. I'm aware of this being used at various games studios, including a first party platform owner. Not to say this is in any way good. Hopefully this attention will denormalize this practice throughout the rest of the industry
 
Top Bottom