Comment by joe_mamba
3 hours ago
>Is this specific to US culture? And what about your work environment makes it such a risk?
It's called garden leave, it's popular everywhere, especially if it's a big international company with diverse workforce, sensitive to IP rights, since there's been plenty of cases of people taking company IP on USB drives to the new employer, like that Indian guy who took IP from Valeo to Nvidia and got his home raided by the police because the Valeo guys saw him share it on a Teams call lol. Same for companies in finance or that handle sensitive information. Norwegian trust doesn't fly anymore when it comes to multinational corpos.
Companies run on liability and risk mitigation. If something bad happened once (IP theft or sabotage from someone they let go), then they have to prevent from ever happening again, not keep blindly trusting people while letting it happen.
It is not that common in Norway. It has at least been argued in the past that working your notice period is not just an obligation to employer if they want to enforce it, but a right for the employee on the basis that being walked out can affect your reputation by implying possible misconduct exactly because it has generally been uncommon in Norway.
I haven't worked in Norway for a long time, so haven't kept up to date on the current legal position. The typical argument used to be that if there were concerns over IP theft or sabotage, there were other ways of protecting against that - and indeed, insider risk is something companies need to deal with whether or not someone has been fired.
> working your notice period is not just an obligation to employer if they want to enforce it
And what if they don't want to enforce it? Which is what I was talking about.
What's stopping people's from doing that while employed? I think if you treat your employees with respect, they don't feel the need to this kind of retaliation.
So stealing IP, breaking the law and your contractual obligations, should be allowed if you feel like your employer isn't valuing you enough?
That guy was a six figure paid SW engineer, who stole IP for the opportunity to jump ship to an even better paid gig at Nvidia, not a minimum wage fast food worker who couldn't take it anymore.
Scammers will always be scammers and will use any excuse and opportunity to climb the ladder, no matter how much you value or pay them, they'll always want more from you even when you have no more to give. They'll bankrupt you gladly if they can get away with it, out of greed, envy, spite and malice, I saw this when my parents ran a small business.
You can't defend from this using mutual trust and respect, only by strict IP protection, law enforcement, fines and jail time as a deterrent.