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15 Yale J.L. & Tech. 1 (2012)

handle is hein.journals/yjolt15 and id is 1 raw text is: BEST MODE TRADE SECRETSt

Brian J. Love-
Christopher B. Seaman-
15 YALE J.L. & TECH. 1 (2012)
ABSTRACT
Trade secrecy and patent rights traditionally have been
considered mutually exclusive. Trade secret rights are premised
on secrecy. Without it, they evaporate. Patent rights, on the
other hand, require public disclosure. Absent a sufficiently
detailed description of the invention, patents are invalid.
However, wihthane passage of the Leahy-Smith America
Invents Act (AIA) last fall, this once black-and-white
distinction may melt into something a little more gray. Buried
amidst myriad tweaks to the Patent Act is one that has the
potential to substantially change the boundary between patent
and trade secret protection. For the first time since at least
1952 (and as a practical matter since 1870), an inventor 's
failure to disclose in her patent the Preferred method for
carrying out the invention-the so-called best mode -will no
longer invalidate her patent rights or otherwise render them
unenforceable.
In this brief Essay, we explain why it may become
routine post-patent reform for patentees to attempt to assert
both patent rights and trade secret rights for preferred
embodiments of their invention in certain types of cases. We
also consider potentially undesirable ramifications of this
change and suggest one approach that courts may use to limit
claims of concurrent trade secret and patent protection when
equity demands.
to 2012 Brian J. Love and Christopher B. Seaman.
*Assistant Professor, Santa Clara University School of Law. The authors'
names appear in alphabetical order.
**Assistant Professor, Washington and Lee University School of Law.
The authors wish to thank Jonas Anderson, Colleen Chien, Dmitry
Karshtedt, Mark Lemley, Joshua Pitcock, Michael Risch, Sharon Sandeen,
and Dave Schwartz for their helpful comments on earlier drafts. Brian also

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