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Intellectual Property Trade Secrets: Misappropriation

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type of knowledge or information that trade secret law was meant to protect. not generally known. derives ... Trade secret holder must prove wrong-doing ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Intellectual Property Trade Secrets: Misappropriation


1
Intellectual PropertyTrade Secrets
Misappropriation
  • Fall 2005
  • Professor Loren

2
Essential Elements of Trade Secret Claim
  • Subject matter must qualify for trade secret
    protection
  • type of knowledge or information that trade
    secret law was meant to protect
  • not generally known
  • derives commercial value in its secrecy
  • Reasonable precautions under the circumstances to
    prevent disclosure
  • Defendant acquired the information wrongfully
  • Obtained through improper means
  • Breach of duty

3
Trade Secret USTA 1(4)
  • Attributes
  • derives independent economic value (actual or
    potential) from
  • not being generally known to, and
  • not being readily ascertainable by proper means
    by
  • other persons who can obtain economic value from
    its disclosure or use, and
  • is the subject of efforts that are reasonable
    under the circumstances to maintain its secrecy

4
Measuring Reasonableness
  • Emphasis 1 Deterring wrongful taking
  • Trade secret holder must prove wrong-doing
  • As investment in precaution rises, probability of
    rightful acquisition falls
  • probability of wrongful acquisition rises
  • Emphasis 2 Encouraging innovation
  • Trade secret holder must prove the info has value
  • As investment in precaution rises, probability
    that info is valueless falls

5
Optimum Security
  • At P, (Prob of Secrecy) x (Value of Secrecy)
  • At 0 precaution, (0.05) x (100) 5
  • At 10 precn, (0.40) x (100) 40 up 30
  • At 20 precn, (0.45) x (100) 45 up 25
  • At 30 precn, (0.48) x (100) 48 up 18
  • At 60 precn, (0.59) x (100) 59 down 1

6
Problem 2-5 (p.50)Mobile Mud
  • Reasonable efforts to maintain secrecy?

Are Sales inconsistent with secrecy?
7
Methods of disclosure
  • By T.S. owner through commercial sales of product
  • Is the T.S. apparent (or readily ascertainable)
    from product? If so, protection is lost
  • By T.S. owner, intentionally
  • Protection is lost
  • By T.S. owner accidentally
  • How widespread?
  • By third-party independent creator
  • Protection is lost
  • By third-party misappropriator
  • Protection is lost

8
Essential Elements of Trade Secret Claim
  • Subject matter must qualify for trade secret
    protection
  • type of knowledge or information that trade
    secret law was meant to protect
  • not generally known
  • derives commercial value in its secrecy
  • Reasonable precautions under the circumstances to
    prevent disclosure
  • Defendant acquired the information wrongfully
  • Obtained through improper means
  • Breach of duty

9
Misappropriation -- UTSA
  • Acquisition of a TS by a person who knows or has
    reason to know that the TS was acquired by
    improper means, OR
  • Disclosure or use of a TS without consent by a
    person who
  • Used improper means to acquire knowledge of the
    TS
  • At the time of disclosure or use, knew or had
    reason to know that his knowledge of the TS was
  • Derived from or through a person who had utilized
    improper means to acquire it
  • Acquired under circumstances giving rise to a
    duty to maintain its secrecy or limit its use, or
  • Derived from or through a person who owed a duty
    to the person seeking relief to maintain its
    secrecy or limit its use, or
  • before 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

10
(No Transcript)
11
Improper Means?
  • E.I. duPont deNemours v. Rolfe (5th Cir. 1970)
  • Violating commercial morality
  • What level of security would have been optimal?

Security Protection
12
Improper Means
  • UTSA 1(1)improper means include theft, bribery,
    misrepresentation, breach or inducement of a
    breach of a duty to maintain secrecy, or
    espionage through electronic or other means

13
Problem 2-7
  • Unsolicited unilateral disclosure of an idea does
    not create a confidential relationship giving
    rise to trade secret protection
  • such disclosure may destroy the secrecy required
    for protection!
  • Need evidence of confidential relationship
  • Express
  • Implied
  • Circumstances of disclosure
  • Company practices
  • Industry practices

14
Smith v. Dravo
  • Trade Secrets?
  • Pending patent application
  • Blueprints
  • Customer information and correspondence with
    customers
  • Was there a duty?
  • Look to the purpose that motivated the TS owner
    to make the disclosure and what the Def. must
    have know about that motivation

15
(No Transcript)
16
Implied Duty of Confidence
  • Rest. (3rd) Unfair Competition, 41(b)
  • the relationship between the parties to the
    disclosure or the other facts surrounding the
    disclosure justify the conclusion that, at the
    time of the disclosure,
  • (1) the recipient knew or had reason to know
    that the disclosure was intended to be in
    confidence, and
  • (2) the owner was reasonable in inferring
    that the person consented to an obligation of
    confidentiality

17
Confidential Relationships
  • Is there a duty of confidentiality?

18
Proper Means(valid defenses)
  • Independent invention
  • Reliance on publicly available documents
  • Distinguish from knowable from public sources
  • Deduction from publicly available items
  • Reverse Engineering from lawfully acquired
    embodiment of the TS

19
Proper MeansReverse Engineering
  • Chicago Lock v. Fanberg
  • Pre-UTSA in California
  • Duties?
  • Locksmith to lock owner
  • Lock owner to Chicago Lock
  • Locksmith to Chicago Lock

Yes
No
No
  • Transitive property does not work here

20
Reverse Engineering
  • Why allow it?
  • Takes time and money, letting owner recoup costs
  • We benefit from competition, which is the norm
  • Reverse-engineers learn new info, ways to improve
  • Contract prohibiting reverse engineering
  • Courts split on enforceability
  • Firms make products less readily
    reverse-engineerable (false parts, breaks if
    opened, etc.)
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