The Growing Trend Toward Trade Secret Protection and Away from Patent Protection
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Many assume that patent protection is the most valuable form of intellectual property (IP) protection one can secure in today's business environment. While this may have been true to a large degree in the past, in today's market many are questioning this assumption and making a shift towards using trade secret protection instead of patents to guard their valuable IP assets and technology. Why this shift in thinking?
Much of the momentum of this shift is due in large part to the enactment of the
To understand this shift, it is important to note that a critical difference between trade secret protection and patent protection in the
Some of the reasons for this shift are the significant size of jury awards and the specific remedies involved in DTSA trade secret litigation (including the injunctive relief and extraterritorial reach available under the DTSA). For example, in December of 2024, in
If your business is using or considering using trade secret protection or patent protection to safeguard its IP assets and technology, careful consideration is needed of the impact of this decision on the value of those IP assets and technology. Each of these type of IP rights provide different forms of legal protections, and they vary in terms of the steps that must be taken to secure the desired protection as well as in the expense involved to achieve this protection. At Parsons Behle & Latimer we have the necessary expertise to help our clients be informed about and make these decisions, and we are here to assist in dealing with the legal issues associated with trade secret rights and patent rights. Please let us know how we can help you and your business in this regard.
Enforcement Revival:
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Historically, both the public and private sectors shared concerns that issuing broad and strong patent rights would encourage abusive patent litigation brought by Non-Practicing Entities (NPEs). So-called "patent trolls" were believed to hold patents not for innovation, but to extract settlements from businesses through the threat of onerous and costly litigation. In response,
Now, the playing field seems to be shifting. Modern NPEs are no longer simple entities, holding patents and waiting to sue. Instead, NPEs today have become highly-complex (and lucrative) financial investments, which are often backed by sophisticated third-party litigation funders, who, like traditional investors, conduct financial analysis to determine patent litigation worth funding. Accordingly, NPEs are better funded, more aggressive and more likely to pursue litigation to judgment—not just settlement.
Against this backdrop, the second
Three bills pending in
- The RESTORE Act (S.4840) - The Realizing Engineering, Science, and Technology Opportunities by Restoring Exclusive Patent Rights Act would reinstate automatic injunctive relief for patent holders who prove infringement, overcoming the
- The PREVAIL Act (S.2220) - The Promoting and Respecting Economically Vital American Innovation Leadership Act would limit the use of inter partes review proceedings by narrowing who can file such actions and apply estoppel from the time a challenge is filed rather than upon its ultimate decision. This would make it harder for defendants to invalidate patents early and shift leverage to plaintiffs—particularly those not actively making or selling products.
- PERA (S.2140) - The Patent Eligibility Restoration Act aims to clarify and expand what inventions are eligible for patent protection and strengthen the presumption of validity that patents currently enjoy, making it harder to invalidate them in Court.
Taken together, these proposals would make patents harder to challenge and easier to enforce—marking a substantial change in the
For many companies, intellectual property (including patents) represents a significant portion of their total value—and these developments bring both opportunity and risk. Business owners would be wise to monitor these reforms closely and assess whether their current patent strategies are aligned with the evolving legal environment.
The content of this article is intended to provide a general guide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought about your specific circumstances.
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