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Sun In-House Lawyers, Polish Your Resumes ASAP

Written By
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Web Webster
Web Webster
Apr 24, 2009

“So what will happen to Sun’s hefty legal department, which
listed 170 lawyers in 2006?

“”Unless they have a very unique area of expertise where there
might be a need for Oracle, I would suggest they would start
looking for jobs,” said former BEA lawyer Friedman. “A year after
the thing closes, my guess would be, less than 10 percent of the
Sun legal department will be left.”

“Any lawyer working with software should pretty much forget it,
said Facer, because Oracle will use its own lawyers for that.
“Sun’s legal team, from that standpoint, won’t be needed.”

“However, he and others pointed out that since Sun is also in
the hardware industry with its server business, more lawyers may
get to stick around than when Oracle was simply swallowing software
rivals.

“”Certainly with Sun there’s less overlap with technology, and
therefore the patent lawyers and the licensing attorneys would have
a little more job security than they might otherwise,” said Cary
Platkin, a solo practitioner who worked at another Oracle takeover
target, Siebel Systems. Platkin left Siebel before the 2005 deal
for other reasons.”

Complete
Story

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Web Webster

Web Webster

Web Webster has more than 20 years of writing and editorial experience in the tech sector. He’s written and edited news, demand generation, user-focused, and thought leadership content for business software solutions, consumer tech, and Linux Today, he edits and writes for a portfolio of tech industry news and analysis websites including webopedia.com, and DatabaseJournal.com.

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