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TRADE SECRETS

Outline of Presentation
What are trade secretsKeeping them secretTrade secrets or patentsLegal protection for trade secrets and
remedies for their misappropriation

What are Trade Secrets
Trade secrets are confidential information that has commercial value by virtue of being kept secret and reasonable steps have been taken to keep it secret.

Trade secret audit
Conducting an TS audit is to determine whether or not you have any trade secret assets; then to identify them; and final to take measures to make sure they retain their status as protectable trade secrets
Should be done periodicallyTeam – trusted people who know the
company

Why should you conduct a TS audit
Identify assets that would otherwise be unknown
By identifying and protecting prevent their loss
A court is more likely to give TS status to information identified internally as TS
Establish clarity

Potential trade secrets
Technical and scientific informationFinancial, legal and HR informationCommercial information

Technical and Scientific Information
product information technical composition of a product (medicine, paint,
recipe for a sauce), data about product performance, product design information
manufacture information manufacturing methods and processes (weaving
technique, device process), production costs, refinery processes, raw materials, machinery
know-how necessary to perform a particular operation

Commercial Information
customer listbusiness strategies/plansmarketing strategy/researchcustomer buying preferences and
requirementsconsumer profiles sales methods

Financial, Legal and HR Information
Pricing informationSalary and compensation plansEmployee evaluation

Monday April 9 3:45 AM ETFruit of the Loom Sues Competitor
CHICAGO (AP) - Fruit of the Loom is suing competitor Gildan Activewear Inc., accusing the Montreal company of stealing trade secrets to grab a competitive edge in the cutthroat apparel business.
Fruit of the Loom contends the reports include production goals for plants in El Salvador, Honduras and Mexico that would allow Gildan to estimate production costs. They detail sales to specific customers, trends in demand and budget information.

Develop a trade secret protection policyHR policyRestrict access“Confidential”

Human Resource Policy
Awareness creation/strong enforcement of breaches
Confidential agreements/clausesStaff manualExit interviews, non compete agreementsSimilar expectations vis-à-vis third party
consultants

Restrict Access
Documents under lock and key password protection Disclosure on a “need to know”basis Registration at reception/visitor logs/escorts Use “keep out” “authorized personnel only”signs Access controlled photocopiers, scanners,
computers. Use of shredders Nothing on the internet

“Confidential”
“This document contains confidential and proprietary information of [COMPANY] and is protected by copyright, trade secret and other national laws. Its receipt or possession does not convey any rights to reproduce, disclose its contents, or to manufacture, use or sell anything it may describe. Reproduction, disclosure, or use without specific written authorization of [COMPANY] is strictly forbidden”

Example – Coca Cola
Said to be the best kept secretFormula kept in a bank vault
Can only be opened by a resolution of the company Board of Directors
Only two people know the secretTheir identities are unknown
They cannot travel together
They oversee the production

Patent or Trade Secret Protection
Such information may qualify for patent protection or trade secret protection. A company may choose trade secret protection even for information that qualify for patent protection.

Trade Secrets or Patents
No registration (costs/time factor)
Duration is not limited to specified period of time
No disclosure Wider information Difficult to enforce No protection against
independent discovery or RE
Registration required (cost/time factor)
Limited duration Disclosure required Limited to claims Easier to enforce Exclusive rights

As to whether TS or patent is the more appropriate protection depends on the kind of product, nature of the business and the policies of the company. Some products have a short commercial life (TS better), some information may be difficult to keep secret and some products may be more easily reverse engineered than others (patent better).

Protection for Trade Secrets
Often no specific lawWhere there is a contract; employees with
express provisions in their contracts or an implied duty of confidentiality or those who have signed NDA or CA
Where there is no contract; information imparted in confidence and used in breach of that confidence or information obtained by unlawful or improper means (theft, industrial espionage, bribery)

Remedies
Civil remedies based on breach of contract or tort law; damages, injunctions, seizures and impoundment
Criminal remedies - rarely a criminal offense in its own right but could attract criminal liability by committing criminal offenses for procuring the information (theft, trespass etc)

Final thought
You may not know that you have valuable business information recognized by law as trade secrets till it is too late.
Identify and protect themThey may be the key to your
competitiveness