flooha | 16 years ago | on: Ask HN: Is a .net domain good enough?
flooha's comments
flooha | 16 years ago | on: The stray dog ecosystem of Moscow
...they definitely do clean the city. They keep the population of rats down.
I wonder if the dogs have learned to relieve themselves in places more acceptable to people or if the people just tolerate it. Piles of crap on the train is not very appealing.
flooha | 16 years ago | on: Ask HN: Domain hacking
flooha | 16 years ago | on: Why I Won’t Sign Your NDA
rising out of, or in connection with, performing the Services
This bit seems to limit it to whatever I happen to be doing for them, but as this story, currently on the front page of HN shows, even lawyers have difficulty nailing it all down.
http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=1050952
For example, if I come up with some clever little bit of javascript that does something interesting, does it mean I can never use that for any purpose ever again? It's terribly ambiguous and limiting. I don't expect to take the job because I am currently working on my own projects and have no concrete way of defending myself against them claiming all of my work.
The second problem I have is this phrase:
Consultant also agrees to promptly make full written disclosure to the Company of any Inventions...
WTF does that mean? Even if it is limited to the "inventions" I "invent" for them, does that mean I'm supposed to immediately write some kind of disclosure after I "invent" something and give it to them? It's ridiculous. Let's assume this refers to my existing "inventions", not developed during the contract term, which I don't think it does. In that case, how could I possibly expect to protect myself? What if I forget to list one of my "inventions". They can claim it? I honestly don't think all of the doubt is even worth the time and effort to nail it all down.
I should pay a lawyer to go over it, but I already know I will require some lines to be removed, which will probably negate their interest in hiring me and thus make paying a lawyer a complete waste of money.
I understand the motivations for these kinds of contracts, but it puts all of the burden on the consultant and gives the overall impression that they can bend you over on a whim and screw you royally. It's basically making me not interested in the job, especially since I have my own things I want to work on. Initially, I recognized that my particular skills were exactly what they needed and it would be a pleasant job, but the "pleasant" part is quickly disappearing.
I'm probably just too uptight about this kind of stuff.
flooha | 16 years ago | on: Why I Won’t Sign Your NDA
Recipient agrees that any violation or threatened violation of this Agreement will cause irreparable injury to COMPANY, entitling COMPANY to obtain injunctive relief in addition to all legal remedies without showing or proving any actual damage and without any bond required to be posted.
without showing or proving any actual damage
yeah, whatever.
Consultant agrees that all right, title, and interest in and to any copyrightable material, notes, records, drawings, designs, inventions, improvements, developments, discoveries and trade secrets conceived, discovered, authored, invented, developed or reduced to practice by Consultant, solely or in collaboration with others, during the term of this Agreement and arising out of, or in connection with, performing the Services under this Agreement and any copyrights, patents, trade secrets, mask work rights or other intellectual property rights relating to the foregoing (collectively, “Inventions”), are the sole property of the Company. Consultant also agrees to promptly make full written disclosure to the Company of any Inventions and to deliver and assign (or cause to be assigned) and hereby irrevocably assigns fully to the Company all right, title and interest in and to the Inventions.
I probably won't be getting the job due to crossing off all of this crap.
flooha | 16 years ago | on: Ask HN: So HNers, whatd'ya get for Christmas?
My gift to us all as a family was to go see Avatar in IMAX 3D tonight. It was amazing.
flooha | 16 years ago | on: What Not To Build
flooha | 16 years ago | on: Ask HN: Review my startup, GetPlaylists
This is a good candidate for a/b testing.
flooha | 16 years ago | on: Ask HN: How to learn to web dev for real ?
Basically I'm trying to get you to find a good mentor. You can learn more in 1 week from a good mentor than you can by reading PDFs and blog posts for two years.
flooha | 16 years ago | on: Why I gave away my company to charity
flooha | 16 years ago | on: There's no speed limit. (The lessons that changed my life.)
flooha | 16 years ago | on: Wakemate (YC S09) helps you kiss groggy mornings goodbye
flooha | 16 years ago | on: Ask HN: What's your favorite Windows Text Editor?
flooha | 16 years ago | on: Ask HN: what hosted blogging solution would you recomend?
flooha | 16 years ago | on: Ask HN: what hosted blogging solution would you recomend?
If you have questions, look me up on Google Talk as "flooha", or email me at matt [at] flooha [dot] com.
flooha | 16 years ago | on: Dynamic Pricing: Let your prices rise or fall until you maximize revenue
flooha | 16 years ago | on: Advice needed: is YC worth it at their valuation?
That this post is a mistake?
flooha | 16 years ago | on: Tell HN: 360 Voltage is out of Beta (10 PRO accounts to giveaway to HN)
I'm particularly interested in the keyword distiller.
edit: I forgot to mention that I really like the design. Nice and clean.
flooha | 16 years ago | on: What you'd build if you had 100 millions?
flooha | 16 years ago | on: What you'd build if you had 100 millions?
http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=1058437
I'm curious how much it really matters. I can see it being a big deal for email, but for organic traffic I'm not convinced. Most domain squatters don't have anything up on the site, have a adsense landing page or something extremely outdated. Assuming your site has even mild success, your search engine ranking will be much, much higher. Sadly, the email issue is probably a show-stopper.
Also, I don't think a lot of people actually type the domain in the address bar. They're either clicking a link or searching.
The real question here is, can you pull a dropbox? Trademark the name, launch your site, get popular, then just take away the .com if the owner somehow infringes on your mark. Is this a valid precedent or do you have to have boat-loads of cash to actually make this work?
In any case, it's probably just easier to choose a different name. I just emailed someone yesterday about a .com domain name and he wanted $20k. Seems like the dropbox method might be easier.