With the emergence of new technologies and innovation, such as connected autonomous vehicles and EVs, the use of trade secrets has grown in importance in the automotive sector, due to the immediacy of the protection trade secrets law offers offer and its ability to cover all types of information.

Where other intellectual property ("IP") rights require registration and lengthy application procedures, as long as the internal right policies are in place, trade secret protection can be invoked as and when needed and adapted as required. Trade secrets laws are therefore well suited to the protection of fast-paced innovation, and the information and data generated in this context. Indeed where other IP rights fail in enforcement terms, businesses can often fall back on trade secrets protection as a backstop.

It is now common for a small group of key employees to hold significant know-how extremely desirable to any competitor. Trade secrets provisions are also one of the main rights relied on to prevent dissemination of such know-how. Practical and technical restrictions should be put in place around how these sorts of employees can share key data and knowledge while in a business’ employment, as well as restrictions around the use of such knowledge once the employee leaves the business.

In light of the increased prominence of trade secrets in the automotive industry, this article in our series "Views on an evolving automotive industry", provides an overview of key issues relating to the use of trade secrets to protect innovation, including setting out what constitutes a trade secret in the UK, Germany (EU), Australia and China, discussing employee risks, and advising on establishing a trade secrets protection strategy to reduce and police the risks of the loss of business critical know-how, and enforce rights in trade secrets.

Read the full briefing here.

See also these other IP related briefings in the Views on an evolving automotive industry series on:

Key contacts and authors

Nanda Lau photo

Nanda Lau

Head of M&A, China, and Chief Representative, Shanghai Office, Mainland China and Shanghai

Rebekah Gay photo

Rebekah Gay

Partner, Head of Intellectual Property, Sydney

Lawrence Savell photo

Lawrence Savell

Knowledge Lawyer, New York

Key contacts

Nanda Lau photo

Nanda Lau

Head of M&A, China, and Chief Representative, Shanghai Office, Mainland China and Shanghai

Rebekah Gay photo

Rebekah Gay

Partner, Head of Intellectual Property, Sydney

Lawrence Savell photo

Lawrence Savell

Knowledge Lawyer, New York

Rachel Montagnon photo

Rachel Montagnon

Knowledge Counsel, London

Alizee Zheng photo

Alizee Zheng

Senior Associate, Mainland China and Shanghai

Sian McKinley photo

Sian McKinley

Of Counsel (Employed Barrister), London

Roddy Martin Jonathan Turnbull Dr Ina vom Feld Nanda Lau Rebekah Gay Emma Iles Lawrence Savell Christine Young Rachel Montagnon Jessica Welborn Alizee Zheng Sian McKinley