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A trade secret is any information used in a business that may give the business an advantage over competitors who do not know the trade secret. Not sharing this secret means keeping company information safe.
"A trade secret is a formula, practice, process, design, instrument, pattern, or compilation of information which is not generally known or reasonably ascertainable, by which a business can obtain an economic advantage over competitors or customers. In some jurisdictions, such secrets are referred to as "confidential information" or "classified information"."
Yes! It is a secret, since there must be quite a number of competitors.
-They used personal information obtained by the fbi -They used secret evidence -They disregarded individual civil rights
The Gestapo or "secret police"
The information obtained from the AdWords Miracle website is a secret way to learn how to earn $ 300/day using Adwords. A method they, the people of Adsense, rather don't want you to know about.
Google alerts is one free way to track your competition. You can customize what information and how often you receive information. Following your competitors on social media site such as Facebook and Twitter are other ways to see how they are communicating with consumers. You can even enroll in mail or email lists to get a sense of promotions or become a kind of secret shopper and test out their product or services yourself.
Unclassified information is a formal marking to designate that the information is not classified as confidential, secret or top secret.
no one has obtained the badge.perhaps,there is a secret networker for this?
A trade secret lawyer is an attorney who specializes in the field of trade secret law. A trade secret is a piece of information that is not available to the general public, which a business can use in order to maintain a competitive advantage either over its competitors or over its customers. Depending on the jurisdiction, a trade secret can also be referred to as classified or confidential information. A trade secret can be a practice, instrument, pattern, formula, process, or any other piece of knowledge that gives a business an advantage. In order for a business to protect its information, or to protect itself from accusations of stealing trade secrets, a company requires the assistance of a trade secret lawyer. The exact language that is used to define what qualifies as a trade secret depends on the jurisdiction, because certain types of information are protected, certain types are not, and other types are required to be public, depending on the circumstances and the location of a business. Even so, there are generally three components that are common with the definition used in all jurisdictions. First, the information must not already be generally available to the public. In other words, a company can not claim that information is a trade secret if the information is already accessible by other parties, regardless of whether or not the company was aware of this when the information was discovered or obtained. Second, the information has to provide some sort of business advantage to the company. This advantage must come not only from the information itself, but from the fact that the information is not generally known. In other words, the information would have to lose its value if it became generally known in order for it to be classified as a trade secret. Finally, the holder of the information has to make a reasonable effort to keep the information secure. If the information is easily obtained by outside entities, the company can not claim that the information was a trade secret. Without reasonable safeguards in place, outside entities can only assume that the holder is not attempting to keep the information a secret. A trade secret is similar, but not identical to a patent or a trademark. Both patents and trademarks must be publicly disclosed in order for them to be protected. A trademark is a specific logo or slogan that is associated with a specific brand. A trademark is therefore intended to be made publicly available in the first place. Similarly, a patent must be made publicly available in order for it to be protected. A trade secret allows for a monopoly on the information that can last indefinitely, but it is not protected from independent discovery by other parties. A patent has a limited time period in which an information monopoly can be maintained, but it is protected from independent discovery from outside parties during that time period.
No, ordinary concentration camps were largely intended to terrorize opponents and were not secret, though precise details of what went on there was not publicized. The extermination camps, however, were top secret.