Intellectual Property
Trade Secret
A trade secret is any form of information the owner has taken reasonable measures to keep secret and from which he derives independent economic value by virtue of its secrecy. 18 U.S.C. § 1839(3).
They last for as long as they are kept secret, so potentially infinitely.
The most common types of trade secrets are client lists and recipes.
They are protected by federal law in 18 U.S.C. § 1836, but the federal law does not preempt state trade secret protections, which also exist.
- Unlike contractual protections, trade secrets are protected against misappropriation by anyone, even if the other party has no contract with you.
Trade secrets are privileged information and do not have to be disclosed in court. Cases about them can be sealed.
Reasonable measures include:
- Keeping such knowledge to only those who need to know such things for the business.
- Access control—both physical and electronic
- Encryption
- Splitting the project into smaller parts
- NDAs
- Confidential markings
What is reasonable is ultimately a jury question.
Trade secrets are property—intellectual property.