Proprietary information: Difference between revisions
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{{a|confi|}}Careful, trooper. It is fun to throw around big words, but be aware of what they mean. | |||
“[[Proprietary]]”, so our good friends on the world wide web tell us<ref>{{Google2|define|proprietary}}</ref>, means “of or relating to an [[owner]] or [[ownership]]”. | “[[Proprietary]]”, so our good friends on the world wide web tell us<ref>{{Google2|define|proprietary}}</ref>, means “of or relating to an [[owner]] or [[ownership]]”. | ||
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Revision as of 17:18, 23 February 2021
NDA Anatomy™
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Careful, trooper. It is fun to throw around big words, but be aware of what they mean.
“Proprietary”, so our good friends on the world wide web tell us[1], means “of or relating to an owner or ownership”.
Ownership implies a property right of some sort[2]. In the context of information, “ownership” is a slippery concept. Only certain kinds of information may be owned — those that qualify as intellectual property: copyrighted material; patents and trade marks.
You can’t own raw data, or facts, or simple lists of things. Client lists, trading data, a credit history, the economic data from your business — these things may be commercially sensitive, and they may be secret — but they are not proprietary information.
Much of the information you might want to protect in a confidentiality agreement is not intellectual property: Indeed, often that is exactly why you need a confi — the secret is not otherwise protected. If it is not intellectual property then it cannot be “proprietary information”
See also
References
- ↑ let me Google that for you
- ↑ let me Google that for you: the right to the possession, use, or disposal of something; ownership.