Proprietary data: Difference between revisions

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{{a|confi|}}Information that you or one of your clients has a legitimate interest in protecting by means of a [[confidentiality agreement]]. There are two main categories of this data:
#redirect[[Proprietary information]]
*'''Intellectual property''': Information which is protected by [[intellectual property]] rules — trade secrets, creative work and so on; and
*'''Raw data''': Unimproved raw data which didn't involve any creative work and isn’t able to be copyrighted or patented, but which nonetheless the client is hotly keen on keeping a lid on (its own client lists, its trading data, its internal economic performanace data and so on).
 
[[Intellectual property]] is legally protected in itself and without the need for a {{tag|contract}}: {{tag|copyright}} arises automatically on creation; patents and trademarks when registered, and an intellectual property holder can enforce its rights against the world without having to prove any agreement. Nonetheless, a [[counterparty]] might want to reinforce its general [[intellectual property]] rights with a contract. Intellectual property rights expire, and only protect certain things (and don't stop you passing on something that has been legitimately provided to you).
Confidentiality obligations are more comprehensive in some ways and the measure of compensation for breach is quite different.
{{Sa}}
*[[Copyright vs. confidence]].

Latest revision as of 06:39, 1 July 2024