manufacturer of control systems for heavy lifting equipment used by loggers and contractors.
The total market consisted of about 200 logging firms, and the company had about a quarter of that market. That is, about 50 of the logging firms used the control system and were repeat
customers, providing about 90 percent of Company B’s sales volume. The control system was
not patented. Although the device was patentable, Company B’s owner had decided to keep the concept secret, and all employees, including Engineer A, signed trade secret documents, agreeing that they would not disclose or otherwise duplicate, use, or sell the concept.
1) Who is involved
Engineer A → employee (electrical engineer)
Company B → small manufacturer of control systems
Customers → logging firms (about 200 total in the market)
2) Business context (important for understanding risk)
Company B has:
~25% market share (≈ 50 firms)
These customers generate ~90% of its revenue
👉 This means:
The company is highly dependent on a small client base
Losing competitive advantage could seriously harm the business
3) The key technical asset
The control system:
Not patented
But could have been patented
Instead, the owner chose:
Trade secret protection
4) What is a trade secret?
A trade secret is:
Valuable technical/business knowledge
Kept confidential instead of publicly disclosed (like a patent would be)
👉 Examples:
Design methods
Algorithms
Manufacturing techniques
5) Why NOT patent it?
If patented:
The design becomes publicly disclosed
Others can study it (but can’t legally copy for a period)
If kept as a trade secret:
No public disclosure
Protection depends on keeping it confidential
👉 So secrecy = survival
6) Engineer A’s obligation
All employees (including Engineer A):
Signed trade secret agreements
That means they agreed:
❌ Not to disclose the concept
❌ Not to copy or reuse it elsewhere
❌ Not to sell or transfer the idea
👉 This is both:
A legal obligation
An ethical obligation
7) Why this matters ethically
Under professional standards (e.g., Professional Engineers Ontario):
Engineers must:
Protect confidential information
Act with loyalty to their employer/client
Not misuse proprietary knowledge
8) What the paragraph is really setting up
This is a classic ethics scenario setup:
👉 Likely upcoming issue:
Engineer A may later:
Leave the company
Use the design elsewhere
Disclose the secret
And the question will be:
Is that ethical?
9) Simple interpretation
Company B relies heavily on a secret design for its business, and Engineer A has legally and ethically agreed to keep that design confidential.
10) Exam insight (very important)
When you see:
“Not patented” + “trade secret agreement”
👉 Immediate flags:Confidentiality duty is VERY strong
Misuse = likely misconduct
Question
ReplyDeleteIs Engineer A guilty of misconduct?
✅ Correct Answer
Yes — breached confidentiality and used employer’s information
Q. Engineer uses employer’s confidential info after leaving.
ReplyDeleteA. Acceptable innovation
B. Misconduct
C. Competitive practice
D. Only civil issue
✅ Answer: B