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3 IPCLJ 1 (2018)

handle is hein.journals/ipclj3 and id is 1 raw text is: 
Colon: THE DEFEND TRADE SECRETS ACT'S EXTRATERRITORIAL REACH


  THE  COURT MUST PLAY ITS INTERPRETATIVE ROLE: DEFENDING THE DEFEND

                 TRADE SECRETS ACT'S EXTRATERRITORIAL REACH

                                         Jada Colon

                                         Abstract

       The  exact reach of the Defend Trade Secrets Act's extraterritoriality provision has yet to
be interpreted by the courts. If United States securities, trademark, and antitrust law serves as any
indication of what is to be expected, the Defend Trade Secrets Act may be subject to an inconsistent
array of interpretation. When faced with  interpreting the extraterritorial scope of the Defend
Trade  Secrets Act for the first time, the court must set a strong precedent by enacting a single,
uniform  effects test that will not falter when applied in different circumstances and by different
circuits. Courts interpreting United States securities, trademark, and antitrust law have enacted a
wide  variety of effects tests for interpreting extraterritoriality. Generally, the language of the
effects test being applied has such an expansive interpretation, causing the courts to struggle with
applying it in a consistent manner.

        Using trade secret policy, legislative intent, and the history of the Defend Trade Secret Act
as a guide, this paper encourages  the courts to enact a misappropriation effects test when
determining the extraterritorial reach of the statute. A misappropriation effects test will take
away  the emphasis on the level of effects necessary to give rise to a showing of effects, and focus
the inquiry on the nature of effects necessary to give rise to a showing of effects sufficient to confer
extraterritorial reach. The  misappropriation  effects test shifts the focus to the specific
misappropriation  effects that Congress sought to protect against in proscribing the Defend Trade
Secrets Act. It is imperative that the courts interpret the extraterritoriality provision of the Defend
Trade  Secrets Act with care so that it does not confine within the United States, what Congress
intended to reach abroad.


                                     I.    INTRODUCTION

       Imagine  that an engineer from your company's subsidiary, located in another country, has
joined a competitor and has begun to use your trade secrets.' In an attempt to avoid the uncertainty
and expense  of suing in another country's court, you contact your Intellectual Property attorney.
To  your surprise, your attorney has informed you that the United States has recently passed trade
secret legislation that may be extended extraterritorially to reach misappropriation outside of the
United States.2 Your lawyer then warns you  that, due to the recent enactment of the legislation,





' Dave Bohrer, Extending US Trade Secret Law to Reach IP Theft in China, FLAT FEE IP, (Apr. 11, 2017),
http://www.flatfeeipblog.con2017/04/articles/trade-secrets/extending-us-trade-secret-law-to-reach-ip-theft-in-
china/.
2 See id.


Published by University of Cincinnati College of Law Scholarship and Publications, 2018

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