The legal concept of a trade secret and its element

2021 ◽  
Vol 15 (2) ◽  
pp. 96-99
Author(s):  
Natiq Elməddin oğlu İbrahimov ◽  

In the broadest sense of civil law, trade secret is the object of its separate branches. The legal institution of trade secret occupies a special place in the system of civil and commercial law and includes a set of general and special civil law rules governing the civil circulation of commercially important information. The Civil Code of the Republic of Azerbaijan does not define a trade secret and does not specify its individual elements. However, we have a special act of legislation in our legislation that regulates trade secrets. Its main element is "information". In order to determine the commercial significance of information under the legislation of Azerbaijan, it is important to clearly define these criteria in the legislation, as well as to cause certain problems in a dynamic environment. According to the legislation of Azerbaijan, there are criteria set out in the legislation to determine the commercial significance of the information. The precise definition of these criteria in the legislation is important, but can also lead to certain problems in a dynamic environment. Key words: commercial secrets, intellectual property law, civil law, Azerbaijani legislation, commercially important information, nou-hau

Author(s):  
Justine Pila ◽  
Paul L.C. Torremans

This chapter deals with the legal protection of trade secrets. Traditionally, trade secret protection was left to the national laws of Member States. These national regimes are rooted firmly in existing legal rules in the areas of unfair competition, tort, or breach of confidence. And there is also the “Directive on the protection of undisclosed know-how and business information (trade secrets) against their unlawful acquisition, use, and disclosure”. The Directive seeks to impose on Member States a minimal form of harmonization and uniformity. It does not impose a (Community) right in relation to a trade secret, but it works with a common basic definition of a trade secret, the principle that there needs to be redress for the unlawful acquisition, use, or disclosure of a trade secret, and a catalogue of measures and remedies.


2020 ◽  
Vol 44 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Charles Tait Graves

In legal disputes where one party claims that it submitted an idea to another party and alleges that the latter used that idea without permission or compensation, two categories of California intellectual property law have increasingly come to resemble one another: (1) trade secret law, most often applied in business or technical contexts; and (2) idea submission law, primarily applied in cases involving film scripts and other media productions. Over the decades, these regimes have developed separately, within distinct business and legal cultures. But recent developments in California trade secret law have brought the two closer together; in some areas, they may even be approaching a unified body of law. This Article explores that possibility. It concludes that although a partial merger is inevitable, the two core causes of action—for asserted trade secrets, a misappropriation claim; for idea submissions, a so-called Desny claim for breach of implied-in-fact contract—will and should remain distinct. A partial merger, however, would lead to beneficial exchanges in areas where their doctrines already overlap: (1) idea submission’s “independent development” and trade secret’s “independent derivation” defenses; and (2) statutory preemption under California’s Uniform Trade Secrets Act (CUTSA). California’s idea submission cases have developed sophisticated and robust means to adjudicate the concept of “independent development”—that is, a defendant’s assertion that despite receiving the plaintiff’s idea, it nonetheless came up with the disputed film, television show, or other concept on its own. By contrast, the important and analogous defense of “independent derivation” in California trade secret law remains underdeveloped. This Article argues that the idea submission cases offer a far more rigorous analysis of the defense and could inform similar decisions under trade secret law. In particular, it proposes a methodology that courts can use to adjudicate the independent derivation defense, inspired by the idea submission cases. The idea submission cases largely survived copyright preemption challenges in the 1990s and 2000s after Ninth Circuit rulings preserved the viability of some idea submission causes of action under state law. But surviving copyright preemption is not the same thing as surviving CUTSA trade secret preemption. This more recent form of IP preemption is broad, and it subsumes tort claims seeking to protect information said to be confidential. This Article argues that the CUTSA preempts peripheral idea submission tort claims such as breach of confidence, but it does not preempt the core claim at the heart of California’s idea submission regime—the Desny claim for breach of implied-in-fact contract. The proposed partial merger recognizes the public policy ends of each regime: protecting weaker parties who submit ideas to film and media studios (in narrowlydefined circumstances), and ensuring that litigants cannot use tort claims to subvert the protections the CUTSA and related employee mobility rules provide for the free use of publicly available information that does not meet the statutory definition of a trade secret.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yasamin Rody

Trade secret protection requires secrets of a certain quality, and this can easily be lost. Within the EU’s Member States, the protection of business and trade secrets is different. To improve this protection, the EU adopted Directive (EU) 2016/943 on 8th June 2016. Article 2 (1) of the directive contains a legal definition of trade secrets. This puts the definition developed by case law in Germany under scrutiny. Does the German definition also meet European requirements? In order to answer this question, the author examines the characteristics of the concept of secrecy under German law and compares them with those of the directive. Furthermore, the author deals with the legal nature of business and trade secrets. This relates to the still controversial question of whether trade secrets constitute absolute rights according to section 823 (1) of the German Civil Code.


2006 ◽  
Vol 78 (9) ◽  
pp. 413-441
Author(s):  
Janko Kubinjec

Legal concept of person is to be constituted, while the legal concept of thing is to be established. Legal concept of thing is a metaphysical category that shall be differentiated from the positive-legal definition of thing as an empirical phenomenon, as well from the natural thing, which is also as an empirical phenomenon. Legal concept of thing is a spiritual phenomenon, which belongs to the field of objective spirit. The thing is the basis for the entire civil law. The wrong conclusion that civil law starts with ownership and ownership with possession, is based on the so called naturalistic error. For the title, the thing is primarily a freedom for the person, while the mortgage is the border with which the owner is confronted. At the point where freedom overflows from person to thing we have erga omnes effect of property rights. It is not possible to clearly and materially differentiate person from the thing without defining the law as the freedom, and without making this distinction, the persons can also be defined as res cogitans. In the property law, the essence is manifested through the human relationship. In the law of the contracts and torts the thing is neglected up to the point where we come to property, and point where property becomes the claim. If, in addition to that, directly natural refutation of things is produced, we are faced with the legal concept of damages. In the authentic law, the succession is always the concept pertaining to things and only in the non authentic law it may be the concept pertaining to persons.


2020 ◽  
pp. 167-178
Author(s):  
Olesia Valer'evna Belaia

The object of this research is the determination of legal nature of genomic research data and their role among the objects of civil law. The subject of this research is the data of preclinical and clinical studies of pharmaceutical products, mostly those that contain biomaterial and biomedical cell products. The author underlines the problem of the absence of due legal regulation of genomic research data as the objects of law within Russian legislation, as well as protection of their rightsholders from anticompetitive use. The author reveals the possibility of recognizing genomic research data as the results of intellectual activity that are subject to legal protection as objects of intellectual property, as well as the need to enshrine them in the provisions of the Part 4 of the Civil Code of the Russian Federation. The main conclusion consists in the substantiation of the need for protection of genomic research data as the objects of civil law. Arguments are adduced on the potential reference of genomic research as the results of intellectual activity to the objects of intellectual property. The list of data that may comprise trade secret is subjected to critical analysis. The author proposes the original classification of the results of intellectual activity as the objects of intellectual property from the perspective of the presence of creative beginning as directly invented by human, and indirectly reflecting the result of human activity. The conclusion is formulated on the independent nature of the results of genomic research as the objects of intellectual property in the form of the results of intellectual activity. The author underlines the need for protecting genomic research data as a variety of results of such tests as the know-how, as well as corresponding revision of legal definition of trade secret captured in civil legislation.


2008 ◽  
Vol 130 (10) ◽  
pp. 36-38
Author(s):  
Kirk Tesk

This article focuses on advantages to protect intellectual property by keeping it under wraps. There are some things that just cannot keep from getting out. Probably nothing in the law breeds as many myths as trade secrets. One positive aspect of trade secrets is that they can protect things patents cannot, since the general definition of a trade secret is any information that is in some way valuable, provided that reasonable efforts are used to maintain the secret. Trade secret protection can also last indefinitely. Patents, by contrast, expire 20 years after they are filed. The problem with trade secrets begins when engineering managers rely on trade secrets without understanding their limits or use trade secrets as a fall-back business decision. Conducting regular trade secret audits is a mechanism where a trade secret specialist gains an understanding of a company’s secrets, ensures that they are sufficiently defined, and that they are adequately protected. After the product is released, its high-level functionality is no longer a trade secret, but could be protected via a patent. Marketing literature and data sheets are also no longer trade secrets because they are usually made public.


Author(s):  
Arta Snipe

Arta Snipe savā rakstā analizē tiesiskos darījumus un to noslēgšanas praksi zemes likumiskās (piespiedu) nomas tiesisko attiecību gadījumā. Problēmjautājumi veidojas tādēļ, ka, pieņemot lēmumu zemes un ēkas īpašnieku savstarpējās tiesiskās attiecības regulēt atbilstoši nomas līguma noteikumiem, likumdevējs radīja pamatu t. s. dalīto īpašumu pastāvēšanai. Šo piespiedu nomas tiesisko attiecību nodibināšanas pamats ir likums – normas, kas iekļautas likumā “Par zemes reformu Latvijas Republikas pilsētās” un likumā “Par valsts un pašvaldību dzīvojamo māju privatizāciju”. Autore, interpretējot spēkā esošās tiesību normas un judikatūras atziņas, aplūko daudzveidīgo tiesu praksi un dažādos juridiskajā periodikā paustos viedokļus. Pētījuma mērķis ir izvērtēt, vai zemes piespiedu noma ir atzīstama par darījumu un vai tā ir komercdarījums gadījumos, ja vismaz viena no darījuma pusēm ir komersants, un konstatēt šī darījuma noslēgšanas brīdi un prasījuma tiesību rašanās brīdi. Autore secina, ka zemes piespiedu noma nav atzīstama par tiesisku darījumu Civillikuma izpratnē, tādēļ to nevar atzīt par komercdarījumu Komerclikuma izpratnē. In her article Arta Snipe analyses legal transactions and the practice of creating a legal (compulsory) lease of land. The problems arise due to having decided upon regulating legal relations between land and building owners in accordance with the terms of lease agreement, the lawmakers created the grounds for existence of shared property. The basis for the establishment of such a compulsory lease relationship is the law – norms included in the Law “On Land Reform in the Cities of the Republic of Latvia” and in the Law “On Privatization of State and Municipal Residential Buildings”. The author, interpreting the existing legal norms and case-laws, addresses the multifaceted court practice and the viewpoints expressed in various periodicals dealing with legal issues. The study aims at assessing whether compulsory lease of land can be admitted transaction or commercial transaction if one of the sides is a merchant and stating the time of the transaction and time of the claim. The author has concluded that compulsory lease of land cannot be considered as a legal transaction, according to the Civil Law, therefore it cannot be claimed as commercial transaction according to the Commercial Law.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vilhelm Schröder ◽  
Philipp Widera

Abstract In this article, the authors compare how the courts in two different jurisdictions handle trade secrets in patent litigation. Even though the two countries observed, Finland and Germany, are both continental European civil law systems with similar legal traditions, the approach to trade secret protection in litigation is quite different in many aspects. While Finland already has comparatively sophisticated legislation and jurisprudence when it comes to the protection of trade secrets, the German approach is rather different, and could be compared to a patchwork carpet. In this article, the authors review the international and European legal framework before delving into the details of the two national legal systems. Finally, they give guidelines on how to harmonize trade secret protection in litigation in order to strike a fair balance between the different interests at stake.


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