| Open source information and Business Secret
Open source information is public
information, data that is legally available to anyone. Most of the
information sought on any topic, according to intelligence professionals,
is publicly available. Estimates go as high as ninety-five percent
(95%) as to what is discoverable in the public sector. For example,
the vast majority of what a competitor might want to know about
a biotechnology firm resides in public sources like magazines, books,
databases, and the Internet. The same goes for manufacturers of
microprocessors, automobiles, steel, and myriad other products.
Trade secrets are acquired through improper means, for example
such as theft, or they are misappropriated through a breach of confidence,
as when an employee who has signed a confidentiality agreement discloses
a trade secret to an outside party. Trade secrets do not have to
be tangible pieces of information- they can be as simple as a "good
idea," or as complex as information that will revolutionize
an industry. The key is that the idea or information must give its
owner advantage over its competitors. Thus, it is imperative that
organizations develop a plan to reasonably guard their secrets from
disclosure. Two key elements in any plan to protect trade secrets
and other proprietary information are nondisclosure agreements and
non-competition agreements.
The dividing line between open source information and other targets
of corporate intelligence (such as trade secrets) is the right to
access. A member of the public can obtain open source data openly,
without fear of legal consequences, and the provider of the data
desires or has no objection to its release into the marketplace.
Trade secrets are the exact opposite: no one but the owner has the
right of access, and the owner has no desire to cast the trade secret
freely upon the marketplace's waters. The taking of trade secrets,
without the owner's permission, violates both state and federal
law. Known as economic, industrial, or corporate espionage, theft
of trade secrets is a form of business intelligence that goes far
beyond open source research. |