The General Knowledge, Skill, and Experience Paradox

66 Pages Posted: 27 Mar 2019 Last revised: 3 Oct 2023

See all articles by Camilla Alexandra Hrdy

Camilla Alexandra Hrdy

University of Akron School of Law; Yale University - Information Society Project

Date Written: March 2, 2019

Abstract

Can employers use trade secret law to prevent employees from using knowledge and skills they acquired on the job? Courts in all fifty states say no — an employee’s “general knowledge, skill, and experience” cannot be protected as a trade secret. Yet a benchmark principle of trade secret law is that employers can share trade secrets with employees so long as they take reasonable measures to preserve the information’s secrecy. The result is a paradox that runs to the heart of trade secret law: employers are encouraged to communicate trade secrets to employees, but this information loses protection if it becomes part of those employees’ unprotectable “general knowledge, skill, and experience.”

This Article traces the roots of this doctrine in the common law and shows how it has been incorporated, though never expressly codified, in statutes, including the Defend Trade Secrets Act of 2016. As originally construed, the general knowledge, skill and experience exclusion was intended to preserve an employee’s right to improve her skills on the job and thereafter transfer those skills to a different job or business endeavor. Trade secret law was thus interpreted not to encompass information that an employee needed in order to continue working in her profession.

This Article reveals that, despite longstanding recognition of the doctrine, courts today misapply and misunderstand it. Rather than separately assessing whether claimed trade secrets constitute an employee’s unprotectable “general knowledge, skill, and experience,” many courts simply assess whether the information is “generally known” to others outside the company or was previously known to the employee before she took the job — and stop there. Courts therefore miss the category of information that, while technically secret to a company, is nonetheless unprotectable. Such oversights stymie the development of trade secret law and have potentially devastating effects for employee-defendants, who may be prevented from taking a new job even when they have not signed a non-competition agreement.

Keywords: trade secrets, employment, knowledge skill experience, employee mobility, non-competition contracts, intellectual property law

Suggested Citation

Hrdy, Camilla Alexandra, The General Knowledge, Skill, and Experience Paradox (March 2, 2019). Boston College Law Review, Vol. 60 , No. 8, 2019, p. 2409, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3332540

Camilla Alexandra Hrdy (Contact Author)

University of Akron School of Law ( email )

259 S. Broadway
Akron, OH 44325
United States

Yale University - Information Society Project ( email )

New Haven, CT

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