Home / Insight / Trade secrets and their protection

Trade secrets and their protection

Need for action: Protection of trade secrets

Software, algorithms, business strategies, recipes or customer lists are essential company assets and sensitive information that often cannot be protected as intellectual property rights (trademarks, designs, patents, etc.). Therefore, it is important to protect them from unauthorised access by third parties. Otherwise, there is a risk of appropriation by third parties or unauthorised use by former employees without any possible sanctions.

Three out of four corporate executives believe that there is a need to invest more in protecting trade secrets – this is one of the key findings from a recent analysis conducted by CMS in cooperation with "The Economist Intelligence Unit". Only half of the companies surveyed have taken active steps to restrict access to confidential information and reduce the risk of a trade secret misappropriation.

Dutch Trade Secrets Protection Act

The Dutch Trade Secrets Protection Act ("Wet bescherming bedrijfsgeheimen") provides protection for trade secrets but also establishes the prerequisite that "reasonable steps" are taken to keep the information secret.

For every piece of information which should be protected, the requirement of "reasonable secrecy measures" means that a bundle of protective measures must be taken at three levels:

  1. At the legal level (i.e. confidentiality documents, NDA's)
  2. At the organisational level (i.e. employee trainings)
  3. At the technical level (i.e. IT-security measures)

The concrete protective measures depend on the importance, type and risk of misappropriation of the individual piece of information. There is no standard solution. Trade secrets must be categorised individually for each company and a suitable concept of protection must be developed and implemented.

Free online risk analysis from CMS

Our online risk analysis tool helps you assess the level of know-how protection in your organisation. It enables you to gain an initial overview of the vulnerabilities in your organisation with regard to trade secrets and sensitive data.

It only takes five minutes to find out whether your company needs to take action to protect its know-how.

Start here

The solution: CMS PROTECT

In order to assist companies in protecting their trade secrets CMS offers the product CMS PROTECT.

With three modules of CMS PROTECT, we develop and implement a protection concept with and for your company to ensure the protection of secrets.

If you would like to receive further information about CMS PROTECT or if you have any questions, please contact our team of experts.

More information about CMS PROTECT can be found on this page.

13/09/2022
Open secrets? Guarding value in the intangible economy
Some leaks can’t be fixed “Confidential information is like an ice cube... give it to the party who has no refrigerator or will not agree to keep it in one, and by the time of the trial you have just a pool of water.” This, from the so-called Spycatcher case (1987), applies well to corporate assets: fail to store them correctly and all you might have left is an expensive mess. The consequences of even a minor exposure of a trade secret can be huge. As this report reveals, the protection of trade secrets is rightly recognised by most senior executives as a priority issue. But the research also reveals gaps that leave companies unnecessarily exposed to risks. The top named threats – cybersecurity attacks and employee leaks – resonate with what we see impacting our clients. Increased home and remote working is straining security measures and employee loyalty. Added to this, an ‘innovate or die’ attitude in highly-com­pet­it­ive sectors can motivate new joiners to arrive with questionable material from their previous employer, or worse: outright theft between competitors. But while it is easy to focus on the lurking threats from weakened cyber security and disgruntled employees – and they are important – there are more routine actions a company can take to safeguard its secrets than just updating its IT systems or the employee handbook. Commonly, those who most need our help already have a trade secrets policy but have not properly implemented it in relation to the secret in question. Or the policy has not been updated to reflect the intangible assets the business now owns. Or protection was taken for granted. With trade secrets – which for many businesses are strategically more important than a public patent portfolio – it is always costlier and messier to find solutions after a theft or a leak. Identifying the trade secrets and the threats posed to them, combined with rigorous internal processes and well-drafted contracts, can help prevent such problems from happening. Harder, but just as necessary, is engaging hearts and minds in corporate culture, to know why trade secrets are important, why we are all are responsible for protecting them, and what may happen if we do not (to both the company and the individual). In our experience, the businesses with the strongest defences have not only thought strategically about their intangible assets and how best to protect them but are also prepared for the worst. The trick to avoiding an asset becoming a crisis is to be wise before the event.
CMS Expert Guide to trade secrets
Global Expert Guide on trade secrets which offers the legal framework per...

Explore more

CMS PROTECT

Authors

Portrait ofRogier Vrey
Rogier de Vrey
Amsterdam
Portrait ofAukje Haan
Aukje Haan
Amsterdam
Portrait ofAyşegül Avci
Ayşegül Avci
Amsterdam

Feed

07/06/2022
Trade secret laws in the Netherlands
General 1. Has the Directive (EU) 2016/943 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 8 June 2016 on the protection of undisclosed know-how and business information (trade secrets) against their...
Comparable
09/09/2021
The Changing Face of Cyber Claims
A cyber insurance loss study in Continental Europe