Title: Intellectual Property Trade Secret lesson two
1Intellectual PropertyTrade Secret lesson two
- Fall 2009
- Prof. Loren
- Reminder grading election forms due in one
week Tuesday, September 8
2Last week - Review
- What is protected by trade secret law?
- Information
- Valuable in its secrecy
- Not generally known
- (and not readily ascertainable)
- Subject to reasonable efforts to keep secret
3Why reasonable efforts help guard against errors
- Emphasis 1 Deterring wrongful taking (while
avoiding the false positive) - Trade secret holder must prove wrong-doing
- As investment in precaution rises, probability of
rightful acquisition falls - probability of wrongful acquisition rises
(unlikely to hold a rightful acquirer, wrongly
liable) - Emphasis 2 Encouraging innovation
- Trade secret holder must prove the info has value
- As investment in precaution rises, probability
that info is valueless falls
4What rights does a trade secret owner have?
Owner
5What rights does a trade secret owner have?
- What kinds of activity constitute a
misappropriation? - Basic hypotheticals (bottom of first page of
reading for today) - Employee sells formula to competitor
Misappropriation? - Is the competing company a misappropriator?
- Does the company need to use the information to
be liable? - Break-in and photograph -- Misappropriation?
- What if he could take the photos without
breaking in?
6UTSA
- (2) "Misappropriation " means
- (i) acquisition of a trade secret of another by a
person who knows or has reason to know that the
trade secret was acquired by improper means or - (ii) disclosure or use of a trade secret of
another without express or implied consent by a
person who - (A) used improper means to acquire knowledge of
the trade secret or - (B) at the time of disclosure or use knew or had
reason to know that his knowledge of the trade
secret was - (I) derived from or through a person who has
utilized improper means to acquire it - (II) acquired under circumstances giving rise to
a duty to maintain its secrecy or limit its use
or - (III) derived from or through a person who owed a
duty to the person seeking relief to maintain its
secrecy or limit its use or - (C) before a material change of his position,
knew or had reason to know that it was a trade
secret and that knowledge of it had been acquired
by accident or mistake.
7duPont v. Christopher(5th Cir. 1970)
- Alleged Trade Secret?
- Methanol production process
- Parties
- duPont Makes methanol
- Christophers Take aerial photographs for 3rd
party - D. Ct. denied Christophers motion to dismiss
- Christophers appeal Argument?
- No independent legal wrong thus proper means
- So, its like reverse engg or independent
research - Texas law Rest. Torts 757 (1939)
8Restatement 757
- One who discloses or uses anothers trade secret,
without privilege to do so, is liable to the
other if - (a) he discovered the secret by improper means,
or - (b) his disclosure or use constitutes a breach of
confidence reposed in him by the other in
disclosing the secret to him - Must there be an independent legal wrong?
- Cases restatement comment f
9duPont contd
- Standard for improper means ?
- Brown case obtaining information without
paying the price expended by the trade secret
discoverer - To obtain knowledge of a process without
spending time and money to discover it
independently is improper . - R.E. (reverse engineering) and I.C. (independent
creation) are proper - But, how do we tell when a particular means is
improper?
10Reasonable efforts to keep secret
- Why is it relevant in this case?
- To obtain knowledge of a process without
spending the time and money to discover it
independently is improper unless the holder
voluntarily discloses it or fails to take
reasonable precautions to ensure its secrecy.
--p.3 - Is that merely a statement of requirements for
protection or does it help us know what is
improper means? - Did duPont reasonably guard the secret ?
- Protect from espionage which could not have been
reasonably anticipated or prevented. - an impenetrable fortress is an unreasonable
requirement - Any cost-justified measures? Tarps? Better
planning? - we need not require the discoverer of a trade
secret to guard against he unanticipated, the
undectable, or the unpreventable methods of
espionage - Popular sport?
- School boys trick?
11Improper Means?
- What level of security would have been optimal?
Legal Protection
Our tolerance of the espionage game must cease
when the protections required to
prevent anothers spying cost so much that the
spirit of inventiveness is dampened. explicit
articulation of what is being balanced
Security Protection
Security Protection
12Under UTSA
- What type of misappropriation would duPonts
claim have been? - UTSA 1(2) Misappropriation means
- (i) Acquisition of a trade secret of another by a
person who knows or has reason to know that the
trade secret was acquired by improper means or - (ii) Disclosure or use of a trade secret of
another without express or implied consent by a
person who - (A) used improper means to acquire knowledge of
the trade secret - UTSA 1(1)
- Improper means includes theft, bribery,
misrepresentation, breach or inducement of a
breach of a duty to maintain secrecy, or
espionage through electronic or other means
13Omega Optical v. Chroma
- Governing law?
- Common law
- Guidance from both restatement and UTSA
- Under UTSA, claim type
- UTSA 1(2)(ii)(B)(II)
- To the extent claims are against Chroma, also
UTSA 1(2)(ii)(B)(III) - Problem with Omegas claim?
- Ex-employees need to have a duty
14Ex-employees duties to ex-employer
- Employees whether current or former, have a duty
not to use or disclose confidential information
imparted to them by their employer. - Duty of confidence attaches to any information
the employee knows or has reason to know is
confidential. - Can be implied from the totality of the
circumstances - No explicit notice is required
- But Something more than mere employee-employer
relationship - Fact-specific inquiry
- Evaluated at the time of acquisition of the
information by the employee - Third relevance of efforts to keep secret?
- establishes employee duty!
15Duty of loyalty revisited
- At-will employees may plan to compete with their
employer even while still employed there and may
freely compete with the employer once they are no
longer employed there.
16Other ways for duties to arise?
- Employee in context where its clear information
should be kept secret - Contractual obligations to keep information
secret (e.g. NDA) - Arrows disclosure paradox
- What if the information covered by the agreement
is generally known? - No T.S. claim
- May have breach claim
- NDA drafting tip limit the obligation to keep
secret to last only while information is not
generally known or not readily ascertainable,
i.e. trade secret protection - So then what would be the point of the NDA?
- Create the duty under T.S. law!!
17Last type of misappropriation
- Inadvertent disclosure through a misdirected
email? - (ii) Disclosure or use of a trade secret of
another without express or implied consent by a
person who . . . - (C) before a material change of his or her
position, knew or had reason to know that it was
a trade secret and that knowledge of it had been
acquired by accident or mistake
18Remedies
- Goals of remedies for TS Misappropriation?
- Prevent (further) disclosure and use of TS
- Compensate for harm, prevent ill-gotten gains
- Deter future misappropriation
19Misappropriation Remedies
Plaintiffs Loss
Defendants Gain
20UTSA 2 Injunctions
- (a) Actual or threatened misappropriation may be
enjoined. Upon application to the court, an
injunction shall be terminated when the trade
secret has ceased to exist, but the injunction
may be continued for an additional reasonable
period of time in order to eliminate commercial
advantage that otherwise would be derived from
the misappropriation. - (b) In exceptional circumstances, an injunction
may condition future use upon payment of a
reasonable royalty for no longer than the period
of time for which use could have been prohibited.
Exceptional circumstances include, but are not
limited to, a material and prejudicial change of
position prior to acquiring knowledge or reason
to know of misappropriation that renders a
prohibitive injunction inequitable. - (c) In appropriate circumstances, affirmative
acts to protect a trade secret may be compelled
by court order.
21Stampede Tool Warehouse
- Whats different in this case v. Omega?
- Signed confidentiality agreements, clearly
identified the information that was confidential - Treated that information as confidential
passwords, control of hard copies, locked
offices, checked garbage - information was in their heads no physical
taking - Doesnt matter memorizing a trade secret is a
way to take the trade secret - General knowledge may be used, not specific trade
secret information
22Stampede Tool Warehouse
- What is the problem with the remedy granted by
the trial court? - Ill. App. Court permanent injunctions are
overbroad in their duration, but not their scope
-- why? - Balancing
- Protecting the legitimate interests of the TS
owner - No unduly burdening the defendant (it is a
fundamental right of an individual to pursue the
particular occupation for which he or she is best
trained.) - Result here 4 year injunction
- Note TRO was entered July 21 1991, this decision
is issued June 13, 1995
23- UTSA 2
- (a) Actual or threatened misappropriation may be
enjoined. Upon application to the court, an
injunction shall be terminated when the trade
secret has ceased to exist, but the injunction
may be continued for an additional reasonable
period of time in order to eliminate commercial
advantage that otherwise would be derived from
the misappropriation.
- Ill. T.S.A. (a)
- Actual or threatened misappropriation may be
enjoined. Upon application to the court, an
injunction may be terminated when the trade
secret has ceased to exist, provided that the
injunction may be continued for an additional
reasonable period of time in appropriate
circumstances for reasons including, but not
limited to an elimination of the commercial
advantage that otherwise would be derived from
the misappropriation, deterrence of willful and
malicious misappropriation, or where the trade
secret ceases to exist due to the fault of the
enjoined party or others by improper means.
24 we did not discuss The remaining slides
Exploring the different subsections of the UTSAs
def. of misappropriation. they are for your
reference.
25UTSA Misappropriation 1
- UTSA 1(2)(i)
- acquisition of a trade secret of another by a
person who knows or has reason to know that the
secret was acquired by improper means - What does this cover?
- X acquires the secret of Y, and X knows that
Ys secret was acquired by improper means.
26UTSA Misappropriation 2
- UTSA 1(2)(ii)(A)
- disclosure or use of a trade secret of another
without express or implied consent by a person
who (A) used improper means to acquire knowledge
of the trade secret - What does this cover?
- X discloses or uses the secret of Y, and X itself
used improper means to acquire the secret.
27UTSA Misappropriation 3
- UTSA 1(2)(ii)(B)(I)
- disclosure or use of a trade secret of another
without express or implied consent by a person
who (B) at the time of disclosure or use, knew or
had reason to know that his knowledge of the
trade secret was (I) derived from or through a
person who had utilized improper means to acquire
it - What does this cover?
- X discloses or uses Ys secret received from Z,
at a time when X knows that its awareness of
the secret derives from Zs use of improper means
to acquire it.
28UTSA Misappropriation 4
- UTSA 1(2)(ii)(B)(II)
- disclosure or use of a trade secret of another
without express or implied consent by a person
who (B) at the time of disclosure or use, knew or
had reason to know that his knowledge of the
trade secret was (II) acquired under
circumstances giving rise to a duty to maintain
its secrecy or limit its use - What does this cover?
- X discloses or uses Ys secret, at a time when X
knows that X learned the secret in a context
where X has a duty to Y to keep the secret or
limit its use.
29UTSA Misappropriation 5
- UTSA 1(2)(ii)(B)(III)
- disclosure or use of a trade secret of another
without express or implied consent by a person
who (B) at the time of disclosure or use, knew or
had reason to know that his knowledge of the
trade secret was (III) derived from or through a
person who owed a duty to the person seeking
relief to maintain its secrecy or limit its use - What does this cover?
- X discloses or uses Ys secret, at a time when X
knows that its awareness of the secret derives
from Z and that Z has a duty to Y to keep the
secret or limit its use.
30UTSA Misappropriation 6
- UTSA 1(2)(ii)(C)
- disclosure or use of a trade secret of another
without express or implied consent by a person
who (C) before a material change of his position,
knew or had reason to know that it was a trade
secret and that knowledge of it had been acquired
by accident or mistake. - What does this cover?
- X discloses or uses Ys secret, at a time when X
has not yet materially changed its own position
and knows that the information was secret and
made known to X through an accident or a mistake.