Metadata
Title
Trade Secret
Category
general
UUID
f3bbd1eba96c4b36a3e7da468dbb1c91
Source URL
https://www.utp.edu.my/Pages/Research/TREx/Intellectual%20Property%20&%20Technol...
Parent URL
https://www.utp.edu.my/Pages/Research/TREx/Intellectual%20Property%20%26%20Techn...
Crawl Time
2026-03-25T07:34:24+00:00
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Trade Secret

Source: https://www.utp.edu.my/Pages/Research/TREx/Intellectual%20Property%20&%20Technology/IP/Trade-Secret.aspx Parent: https://www.utp.edu.my/Pages/Research/TREx/Intellectual%20Property%20%26%20Technology/Intellectual-Property.aspx

About IP

Intellectual Property

Intellectual Property & Technology

DEFINITION OF TRADE SECRET


Trade secrets are intellectual property (IP) rights on confidential information which may be sold or licensed.\

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WHAT QUALIFIES TRADE SECRET?


In general, to qualify as a trade secret, the information must be:

The unauthorized acquisition, use or disclosure of such secret information in a manner contrary to honest commercial practices by others is regarded as an unfair practice and a violation of the trade secret protection.

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INFORMATION PROTECTED UNDER TRADE SECRET


In general, any confidential business information which provides an enterprise a competitive edge and is unknown to others may be protected as a trade secret.

Trade secrets encompass both technical information, such as information concerning manufacturing processes, pharmaceutical test data, designs and drawings of computer programs, and commercial information, such as distribution methods, list of suppliers and clients, and advertising strategies. A trade secret may be also made up of a combination of elements, each of which by itself is in the public domain, but where the combination, which is kept secret, provides a competitive advantage.

Other examples of information that may be protected by trade secrets include financial information, formulas and recipes and source codes.

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TRADE SECRET PROTECTION OFFERED


Depending on the legal system, the legal protection of business secrets forms part of the general concept of protection against unfair competition or is based on specific provisions or case law on the protection of confidential information. While a final determination of whether trade secret protection is violated or not depends on the circumstances of each individual case, in general, unfair practices in respect of secret information include industrial or commercial espionage, breach of contract and breach of confidence.

A trade secret owner, however, cannot stop others from using the same technical or commercial information, if they acquired or developed such information independently by themselves through their own R&D, reverse engineering or marketing analysis, etc. Since trade secrets are not made public, unlike patents, they do not provide “defensive” protection, as being prior art. For example, if a specific process of producing Compound X has been protected by a trade secret, someone else can obtain a patent or a utility model on the same invention, if the inventor arrived at that invention independently.​​

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HOW TO PROTECT TRADE SECRET?


​UTP take preventive measures to protect trade secrets against theft or misappropriation, including:

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