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Trade Secret Litigation

Trade Secret Litigation

Tracking Trade Secret Litigation legal and regulatory developments.

8 entries in Litigator Tracker

Federal Circuit Rules Patent Disclosures Bar Trade Secret Claims in Elist Penuma Case

The Federal Circuit reversed a jury verdict in International Medical Devices, Inc. v. Cornell, holding that cosmetic penile implant designs alleged as trade secrets were not protectable under California law because they had been disclosed in publicly available patents. The court found the designs "generally known" and therefore ineligible for trade secret status. A fourth alleged secret—a list of surgical instruments sent via email without confidentiality markings—also failed protection due to insufficient secrecy measures. The panel reversed findings of trade secret misappropriation, breach of contract under the parties' nondisclosure agreement, and improper inventorship claims related to two Penuma patents. The court affirmed $1 million in statutory damages for trademark counterfeiting.

Supply Chain Recovery Sparks Brand-Manufacturer Litigation Surge in 2026[1][6]

Supply chain disputes are escalating into courtroom battles as manufacturers in beauty, fashion, and automotive sectors clash with suppliers over pricing, delivery failures, and contract breaches. Courts are tightening defenses for performance failures, and litigation risk is climbing as capacity remains tight, freight costs stay volatile, and force majeure clauses have been narrowed. A December 2025 trademark case—Palas v. Le Domaine (Case No. 2:25-cv-11953, C.D. Cal.)—exemplifies the broader trend, pitting skincare founder Brandon Palas's "Beau D." brand against Brad Pitt's French luxury line over cosmetics trademark infringement.

Federal Court Rules AI Chatbot Communications Not Protected by Attorney-Client Privilege

On February 17, 2026, Judge Jed S. Rakoff of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York ruled in United States v. Heppner that a criminal defendant's communications with Anthropic's Claude AI platform were not protected by attorney-client privilege or work product doctrine. The defendant had used the public chatbot to create analysis documents after receiving a grand jury subpoena, then claimed privilege when sharing them with counsel. The court ordered disclosure to the government.

EDVA Denies Alarm.com's Motion to Dismiss SkyBell Trade Secrets Suit

The Eastern District of Virginia has denied Alarm.com's motion to dismiss a trade secrets lawsuit brought by former partner SkyBell Technologies. SkyBell accused Alarm.com of misappropriating video doorbell technology and poaching employees after the companies' partnership ended in late 2022. Alarm.com had argued the three-year statute of limitations under the Defend Trade Secrets Act and Virginia Uniform Trade Secrets Act barred SkyBell's July 2025 complaint. Judge Rossie D. Alston Jr. rejected that defense, holding that SkyBell could not have discovered the alleged misappropriation earlier because a 2015 Development and Integration Agreement between the parties explicitly prohibited reverse engineering and required confidentiality—contractual restrictions that remained in force until the agreement terminated in November 2022.

Luke Littler Seeks UK Trade Mark Registration for His Face

In early March 2026, darts World Champion Luke Littler filed an application with the UK Intellectual Property Office to register his face as a trademark across multiple product and service categories, including computer games, video games, and dartboard lights. The filing reflects a broader shift among high-profile individuals seeking facial trademark protection against unauthorized use and generative AI replication.

First Circuit Rules on Trade Secret Ownership in ZipBy USA v. Parzych

Greenberg Traurig released Episode 88 of its Trade Secret Law Evolution Podcast on April 29-30, 2026, analyzing a First Circuit decision in ZipBy USA v. Parzych that addresses a threshold question in trade secret litigation: who owns the secret and therefore has standing to sue for misappropriation. Host Jordan Grotzinger leads the discussion of the ruling, which turns on ownership and standing doctrine under the Defend Trade Secrets Act and common law frameworks.

Taiwan Court Sentences Ex-Tokyo Electron Engineer to 10 Years for Stealing TSMC Trade Secrets

A Taiwanese court sentenced Chen Li-ming, a former Tokyo Electron and TSMC employee, to 10 years in prison for stealing TSMC's proprietary chip technology to benefit Tokyo Electron's equipment sales. Three other ex-TSMC workers received sentences ranging from 2 to 6 years, while a second Tokyo Electron employee received a suspended 10-month sentence. The court also fined Tokyo Electron's Taiwan subsidiary T$150 million and ordered it to pay TSMC T$100 million in damages. Taiwan's Intellectual Property and Commercial Court issued the ruling on April 27, 2026, under the National Security Act for breaching core national technologies. Most defendants pleaded guilty and retain appeal rights.

LawSnap Briefing Updated May 6, 2026

State of play.

  • The Federal Circuit has hardened the patent-disclosure bar for trade secret claims. In International Medical Devices v. Cornell, the court reversed a jury verdict, holding that designs disclosed in publicly available patents are "generally known" and ineligible for trade secret protection under California's UTSA — a ruling that directly threatens dual patent/trade secret strategies across medtech and other patent-heavy sectors (→ Federal Circuit Rules Patent Disclosures Bar Trade Secret Claims in Elist Penuma Case).
  • Taiwan's courts are imposing serious criminal penalties for semiconductor trade secret theft. The 10-year sentence against a former Tokyo Electron/TSMC employee — with corporate fines and damages against Tokyo Electron's Taiwan subsidiary — signals that national security framing elevates exposure well beyond civil damages (→ Taiwan Court Sentences Ex-Tokyo Electron Engineer to 10 Years for Stealing TSMC Trade Secrets).
  • USTR's 2026 Special 301 Report keeps China on the Priority Watch List, with a concurrent Section 301 investigation into Phase One compliance on technology transfer and IP protection — and China's new Trade Secrets Regulation takes effect June 1, 2026 .
  • DTSA filings are running at elevated volume, with 1,552 new federal cases filed in 2025 — a 20 percent increase — and ownership/standing doctrine emerging as a threshold gating issue alongside the established secrecy and misappropriation elements (→ First Circuit Rules on Trade Secret Ownership in ZipBy USA v. Parzych).
  • For counsel advising technology companies, semiconductor firms, or any client with a dual patent/trade secret portfolio, the practical baseline is: public patent disclosures irrevocably destroy trade secret eligibility, statute of limitations defenses are highly fact-specific and contract-dependent, and cross-border enforcement risk — particularly in Taiwan and through U.S. trade mechanisms — is structurally elevated.

Where things stand.

  • Patent disclosure is a hard cutoff for trade secret protection. The Federal Circuit's ruling in International Medical Devices v. Cornell applies California's UTSA to hold that patent-disclosed designs are "generally known" and unprotectable as trade secrets, regardless of subsequent confidentiality efforts. The same case found that an instrument list sent by email without confidentiality markings also failed the secrecy requirement (→ Federal Circuit Rules Patent Disclosures Bar Trade Secret Claims in Elist Penuma Case).
  • Contractual restrictions on investigation can toll the DTSA statute of limitations. In SkyBell Technologies v. Alarm.com, the Eastern District of Virginia held that a reverse engineering prohibition in a Development and Integration Agreement prevented the plaintiff from reasonably discovering misappropriation while the agreement was in force — defeating a limitations defense at the motion-to-dismiss stage (→ EDVA Denies Alarm.com's Motion to Dismiss SkyBell Trade Secrets Suit).
  • Ownership and standing under the DTSA are active threshold issues. The First Circuit's decision in ZipBy USA v. Parzych addresses who holds enforceable rights when ownership is ambiguous — a question courts are confronting with increasing frequency in joint development, employee contribution, and multi-party scenarios (→ First Circuit Rules on Trade Secret Ownership in ZipBy USA v. Parzych).
  • Taiwan is prosecuting semiconductor trade secret theft as a national security matter. The Tokyo Electron/TSMC prosecution resulted in a 10-year sentence for the lead defendant, corporate fines of T$150 million, and T$100 million in damages — with the National Security Act providing the charging vehicle for "core national technologies" (→ Taiwan Court Sentences Ex-Tokyo Electron Engineer to 10 Years for Stealing TSMC Trade Secrets). Tokyo Electron separately terminated an executive with undisclosed financial ties to Chinese semiconductor equipment competitors (→ Tokyo Electron severs ties with executive Jay Chen over Chinese rival links[1][2][3]).
  • China's enforcement posture on trade secrets is escalating on multiple tracks. The Supreme People's Court's 2025 IP judgment digest covers trade secrets among eight categories, with punitive damages awards up 29.4% year-over-year and a record RMB 640 million award in a single trade secret misappropriation case . China's new Trade Secrets Regulation takes effect June 1, 2026 .
  • The patent-vs.-trade-secret strategic choice is live for technology startups. The Berkeley Patent Survey documents growing use of trade secrets as a complement or substitute for patents, particularly as patent enforcement uncertainty increases and AI innovations favor undisclosed methods — but the Federal Circuit's disclosure bar makes the choice irreversible once a patent application is filed .
  • Georgia has clarified that new employers may indemnify incoming hires against former-employer trade secret suits, reducing one friction point in talent mobility disputes .
  • Accidental source code disclosure triggers trade secret and copyright exposure simultaneously. Anthropic's inadvertent publication of Claude Code source via npm — followed by 8,000+ DMCA takedowns — illustrates how a single operational failure can implicate both trade secret protection and copyright enforcement in AI development contexts .

Latest developments.

Active questions and open splits.

  • Where exactly does the patent-disclosure bar fall under state UTSA variants? The Federal Circuit applied California's UTSA in International Medical Devices, but the analysis of what makes information "generally known" may differ across UTSA-adopting states and under the federal DTSA. Clients with multi-jurisdiction portfolios need state-specific audits of any information disclosed in patent filings (→ Federal Circuit Rules Patent Disclosures Bar Trade Secret Claims in Elist Penuma Case).
  • How far does contractual tolling extend under the DTSA discovery rule? SkyBell holds that a reverse engineering ban in a bilateral agreement can prevent the limitations clock from starting — but the outer limits of that principle (e.g., one-sided NDAs, industry-standard confidentiality clauses, post-termination obligations) remain untested (→ EDVA Denies Alarm.com's Motion to Dismiss SkyBell Trade Secrets Suit).
  • Who owns the trade secret when development is joint or employee-contributed? The First Circuit's ZipBy USA decision addresses standing under the DTSA, but the doctrine governing ownership allocation in joint development agreements, contractor relationships, and AI-assisted development is unsettled and increasingly litigated (→ First Circuit Rules on Trade Secret Ownership in ZipBy USA v. Parzych).
  • Does China's new Trade Secrets Regulation (effective June 1, 2026) materially change enforcement for foreign IP holders? The USTR's Special 301 Report treats recent Chinese enforcement actions as insufficient despite the regulatory movement — the gap between formal legal reform and practical enforcement remains the operative question for clients with China-facing IP portfolios .
  • What is the trade secret exposure when AI source code is accidentally published? The Anthropic/Claude Code incident raises unresolved questions about whether mass DMCA takedowns can restore trade secret status once code is publicly accessible, and whether the "reasonable measures" requirement under the DTSA is satisfied by post-disclosure remediation .
  • How should supplier transition agreements address IP and trade secret risk? As nearshoring and tariff-driven supplier changes accelerate, the question of what confidential information transfers — and what protections attach — at supplier transitions is generating litigation exposure that standard boilerplate does not address (→ Supply Chain Recovery Sparks Brand-Manufacturer Litigation Surge in 2026[1][6], Tokyo Electron severs ties with executive Jay Chen over Chinese rival links[1][2][3]).

What to watch.

  • China's new Trade Secrets Regulation takes effect June 1, 2026 — watch for implementing guidance and early enforcement actions that test whether the regulatory reform closes the gap USTR identified.
  • Whether the USTR's Section 301 investigation into China's Phase One compliance on technology transfer produces additional tariff actions or trade remedies affecting clients with China-facing IP portfolios .
  • Appeals in the Tokyo Electron/TSMC criminal case — the defendants retain appeal rights, and the outcome will shape how Taiwan's National Security Act applies to future semiconductor trade secret prosecutions (→ Taiwan Court Sentences Ex-Tokyo Electron Engineer to 10 Years for Stealing TSMC Trade Secrets).
  • Publication of the full ZipBy USA v. Parzych First Circuit opinion and any circuit-level guidance on DTSA ownership and standing doctrine in multi-party development scenarios (→ First Circuit Rules on Trade Secret Ownership in ZipBy USA v. Parzych).
  • Whether courts in other circuits adopt SkyBell's contractual-tolling rationale or limit it to cases with explicit reverse engineering prohibitions (→ EDVA Denies Alarm.com's Motion to Dismiss SkyBell Trade Secrets Suit).
  • EU Grand Board of Appeal guidance on photorealistic facial trademark registration — a parallel IP boundary question with implications for AI-generated likeness and the scope of personal IP protection strategies (→ Luke Littler Seeks UK Trade Mark Registration for His Face).

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