EA's Open Letter to Ubisoft 104
Alex Petraglia writes "I'd actually laugh at this if I didn't find it so disturbing. An open letter sent from Alain Tascan, General Manager of EA Montreal, to Joel Tremblay, Ubisoft Montreal, begins as such: 'On behalf of all game makers in Quebec, I urge Ubisoft to stop the illegitimate practice of forcing talented people to sign employment contracts that restrict their creative and economic freedom.' EA came under great scrutiny last year with claims of stifling employee creativity, refusing to pay for overtime, and generally engaging in less-than-savory practices. Additionally, it's widely known that EA currently seeks to gain greater control over Ubi through a hostile takeover."
In other news... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:In other news... (Score:1)
Re:In other news... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:In other news... (Score:2)
Re:In other news... (Score:2)
The concept of EA criticizing *anyone* for employment practices is ludicrous. No, wait, "ludicrous" doesn't do it justice.
Remember: you can't spell "exploitation" without "ea"...
Re:In other news... (Score:2)
Re:Instead of bitching about EA (Score:2)
Oh and also the games don't run on my OpenVMS Alpha. Pagans!
Re:Instead of bitching about EA (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Instead of bitching about EA (Score:2)
Re:Instead of bitching about EA (Score:2)
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Re:Instead of bitching about EA (Score:4, Interesting)
Oh well, I'm just crossing my fingers that EA doesn't snatch up the NHL license.
Re:Instead of bitching about EA (Score:2)
It doesn't matter to me (or many others if t
Re:Instead of bitching about EA (Score:2)
Re:Instead of bitching about EA (Score:2)
But I do enjoy the gameplay quite a bit.
Re:Instead of bitching about EA (Score:2)
They briefly had an exclusive deal with the NHLPA, but the NHL got in the way, saying they wanted competition. Link [gamespot.com]
Re:Instead of bitching about EA (Score:2)
Re:Instead of bitching about EA (Score:2)
Re:Instead of bitching about EA (Score:3, Insightful)
Lets say I was going to buy 1 EA game this year and so were 3 of my friends. If I convince them all night to thats 4 sales lost... now when you consider a big hit like EA sports games they sell thousands or millions. Nothing short of losing a good 1000+ sales will even remotely register with them. I don't have the power to stop that and I doubt most of Slashdot does. So "vote with your wallet" works about as well as "vote for the guy you want". One or two peopl
Re:Instead of bitching about EA (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Not only that... (Score:2)
That's enough for me- I don't need the approval of an entire herd in order to justify my objection to the manner in which a certain company does business.
Re:Instead of bitching about EA (Score:3, Insightful)
I can relate. It would be inconvenient for me to not buy EA's Whatever 2006 and/or go and vote and/or give money to charity or any of those thing that misguided people say can make a "difference". I won't go out of my way to do anything that doesn't immediately solve all the problems in one fell swoo
Mod parent up? :) (Score:1)
Re:Instead of bitching about EA (Score:1)
Re:Instead of bitching about EA (Score:2)
Which is a self-fulfilling prophecy. Tens of millions of people out there, that *would* make a difference if they voted the way they actually felt, but don't because they perceive they have to vote against someone, a third party can't win, etc.
Luckily, the guys who made this cool browser I'm using didn't have this pathetic attitude, or they never would have started developing it.
Translation: (Score:5, Funny)
translation (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:translation (Score:2)
Re:translation (Score:1)
Re:translation (Score:2)
The long hours is an industry wide issue. And it is actually much worse at small independant studios that get paid per milestone. There's just no UbiSpouse or T
Re:translation (Score:2)
I am looking forward to those new annoyance laws, as microsoft continually pa
Screw EA (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Screw EA (Score:2)
So, all the employer can threaten you with for breaking the clause is a firing. But you've already left the company if you're signing with a competitor. So what's the issue.
Re:Screw EA (Score:2)
Non-competes are not useless, and have been upheld in courts. But their scope and duration has to be well defined and not something the court views as "overreaching," or it is likely to be voided.
Translation: you can't have a noncompete that says, "never work for any of my competitors, their subsidiaries, or an organization that provides services to them, ever again." However, lots of places have non-competes that say, "You're not going to work for my competitors in X industry for a period of one
Re:Screw EA (Score:3, Insightful)
The important thing to keep in mind is that the Quebec government subsidizes Ubisoft. As the article mentions, 50% of Ubisoft employee salaries are paid by the government. Does Ubisoft really have any right to a non-compete clause when the government is paying half th
Re:Screw EA (Score:2)
Re:Screw EA (Score:2)
Common law (Score:1)
Does "You can't legally sign away any of your basic freedoms in a contract" hold true in Canada as well?
I don't know much about the law of Québec or Louisiana specifically, but the laws of Australia, Canada, and the United States are ultimately based on British law in effect prior to the respective countries' independence. It's as if they share a common law [wikipedia.org]. In some areas of the common law, foreign court decisions are persuasive even if not binding.
Re:Screw EA (Score:2)
Re:Screw EA (Score:2)
Re:Screw EA (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Screw EA (Score:1)
Re:Screw EA (Score:3, Informative)
Incidentally, if you read the article, this is exactly what happened with the last 4 employees that EA poached from Ubisoft. Ubisoft sued, the court agreed, and issued an injuction against those employees working for EA.
Re:Screw EA (Score:1)
There's simply no need for it. The game design and all code produced is already copyright of the employers. There's remarkably little in the way of trade secrets. This is just a ploy by Ubisoft to reduce the employability of their developers by other developers.
Re:Screw EA (Score:1)
The author is choosing a self-serving position. Hardly surprizing.
Nonetheless I find it disturbing that you dislike EA to the point of accepting non-competes. You should learn to ignore the messenger when the message itself is a good one.
Non-competes are, generally, a means of circumventing normal market forces (e.g. if someone has some critical skills that you don't want your
What? (Score:2)
I'm a consultant. I work with a group of consultants. They would promote themselves Klingon-style if it meant becoming an employee, with benefits and (relative) job security. What kind of crack is EA smoking?
In the game industry? (Score:5, Interesting)
Yes, the benefits were good.......... but nowhere near the compensation for the long hours.
Oops... I forgot to add (Score:5, Informative)
You are disposable in the games industry. there is no job security.
Fun with context quotes (Score:2)
Top talent is laid ... with impunity at the end of development cycles.
Where do I sign up???
Re:Fun with context quotes (Score:2)
Huh? (Score:2)
Re:Huh? (Score:4, Insightful)
Ubisoft on the other hand, as a defence, is trying to strongarm their employees to do what they want. Though, as another posted mentioned, it's common practice to sign non-competition agreements, this is not the same thing - let's face it, if you're a game developer in Montreal, and you don't want to work for Ubisoft any more, where are you going to go? Courts will generally not uphold an agreement that forces someone to be left unemployed (and effectively unemployable if they're wanting to use their skill set).
Once again though - EA is using their lawyers to defend the poaching of employees, under the guise of looking out for the employees interests. Somehow, based on their history, I think we can be pretty sure that EA isn't looking for their employees' best interests....
Re:Huh? (Score:3, Interesting)
Granted, it's not exactly the same issue as Ubisoft, but EA is in no position to be criticizing *anyone* over its employment policies.
EA, the peoples' company (Score:2, Funny)
Re:EA, the peoples' company (Score:2)
EA should be the LAST company in the industry to criticize other game publishing/developing companies. They have zero credibility in this area with anyone who has been paying attention in the last year (all of whom, I would hope, are joining me in laughing EA out of the building).
Others have mentioned EA wanting to acquire Ubisoft. I can definitely see Ubisoft as an attractive prospect for EA, as Ubi publishes the same types of games (with less emphasis on run-of-the-mill sports titles of
Authentic? (Score:1)
E.A. was considering a hostle takeover of Ubisoft (Score:4, Informative)
I pulled the above from this article:
http://www.nyunews.com/vnews/display.v/ART/2005/0
I don't know what sort of evil corprate games they are playing, but knowing E.A. they will probably manage to shaft everyone.
shows uncanny insight into human psychology (Score:3, Insightful)
Works elsewhere, as you can imagine. Take that hateful son of a bitch Bill O'Reilly on Fox. The man dumps contempt on absolutely everybody he can, and when it's revisited to him, he pretends to take the high road and chastise those who point out what he does, including a recent stab at NBC. The hypocrisy is so blatant it's blinding, and yet so long as there are a bunch of yokels stupid enough to keep tuning in to Fox to watch the fireworks, he'll get his paychecks and all the critics will be wasting their breath.
Even in politics. Look at George W. Bush. The man lied about WMDs in Iraq. There are other lies, the administration bleeds them, but this one serves as an example well enough. The man lied about WMDs in Iraq, and not just a few, but stockpiles and delivery systems and plans to get more. When the UN started sending back reports that the disarming was going steadily, Bush stepped it up and demanded on television that Saddam stopped playing his games, even when all evidence at the time, and all evidence after the fact, pointed to the fact that Saddam was cooperating more than he was hindering. What did Americans do after Bush started that needless war? They re-elected him. IN RECORD NUMBERS.
It's a question of power. People love people who wield power audaciously. It's why the Napoleans and Alexander the Greats and even the Hitlers get their power and keep it. For all our evolutionary advances, we're still tribal creatures. We love shows of power, because it reminds us that we have it, which is much better than realizing that you don't.
UP (Score:2)
Obligatory Godwin's-Law Reference (Score:2)
Re:shows uncanny insight into human psychology (Score:2)
"Power doesn't come from a badge or a gun. Power comes from lying. Lying big and getting the whole damn world to play along with you. Once you've got everyone agreeing what they know in their hearts ain't true, you've got them by the balls" - Senator Roark
Actually... (Score:1)
The audacity with which power is wielded is not so much the key to success as the finesse and scale to which it is exerted. Napoleon won power by getting the army completely on his side. Hitler won power by becoming popular with the masses and then turning them against the smaller groups. Bush, Clinton, Bush Sr., and every president in the last 40 years has won power because of the money
Re:shows uncanny insight into human psychology (Score:1)
>> IN RECORD NUMBERS.
I agree with you about O'Reilly and the WMD lies, but the voter turn out was the true record; a 3% popular vote margin isn't a record.
Maybe the red states should think again.
http://www.cnn.com/ELECTION/2004/pages/results/pre sident/ [cnn.com]
Popular Vote
Bush 62,040,606
Kerry 59,028,109
http://www.cnn.com/ELECTION/200 [cnn.com]
Non-compete clauses (Score:2, Insightful)
E.g., Computer programmer writing games for Ubisoft, moves to EA. Cannot do so, as 'computer game programming' is competing.
Clearly if a programmer for an unreleased game in a certain genre with unique features left Ubisoft and joined EA to help write a game in the same genre, it'd be an issue. I don't see how it should stop them joining EA to program something in a different area.
If you want to retain your employees, then give them an incent
Open letter to EA (Score:5, Funny)
Screw you!
With our best wishes,
Ubisoft.
I uh .... agree with EA? (Score:1)
Re:I uh .... agree with EA? (Score:1)
Here the law states that if you cannot work within your field due to a non-compete clause the company laying you off has to pay you until it expires or you get another job outside the scope of the clause.
This has effectively made it so companies thinks twice before asking people to sign these.
Yeah yeah, I know unions are evil and bureaucratic, but this law is something they got through here......
Lets put 2 and 2 together (Score:5, Insightful)
Sounds like... (Score:1)
Kettle.
Douchebag.
Re:Sounds like... (Score:1)
Offtopic: Whaaaa? (Score:2)
I gotta say:
WTF?
Look, in San Franciscio the majority of residents speak English, but I don't consider it "offensive" to hear someone speaking Spanish or Chinese on a public street.
If there's any "intolerance" going on there, it's in the minds of someone who can't bear to hear something other than their preferred language spoken in public!
Re:Offtopic: Whaaaa? (Score:2)
Even that, I can accept: one finds a minority of A**holes everywhere.
But, to try to make it law? And have a court strike that down? And *still* be able to try to make it law? That's just whack.
Re:Have to understand Cdn. (and Quebecois) culture (Score:2)
Actually, the federal government has never used the notwithstanding clause, and Québec is (effectively) the only provincial government that has used the clause; see Wikipedia [wikipedia.org].
Another example: Canada models it's socialized health care system after Cuba and North Korea.
The healthcare systems in these countries are often grouped together becaus
Re:Have to understand Cdn. (and Quebecois) culture (Score:2)
Then why have people taken the case for it to be made legal to purchase health care privately all the way to the Supreme Court of Canada? Sounds like pretty stubborn and persistent demand to me.
The Court agreed that preventing this was a violation of rights and freedoms, but stayed it's decision depending on whether Quebec would use the Notwithstanding Clause? Only to have the La Belle Province (Quebec) say it
Re:Have to understand Cdn. (and Quebecois) culture (Score:2)
Re:Have to understand Cdn. (and Quebecois) culture (Score:1)
What a bunch of crap. I can tell you this is not true. People like you give this province a bad reputation. You give the image that we are language facist. Which is far from being truthful.
Re:Have to understand Cdn. (and Quebecois) culture (Score:2)
The same arguments have been applied against spoken speech in public streets, around schools, etc. And, while not having the same Bill 101 force of law, the "offensive" argument is often made.
No, you're wrong. (Score:1, Flamebait)
No, I'm sorry, but there's not. Get over it.
Do the rest of Canada a favour and pull your head out of your ass and get along with the rest of the country. We love Quebec, but frankly I'm getting more than a little tired of this separatist bullsh*t.