商业秘密在印度法律下的定位:一种独特的保护模式

Tania Sebastian
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引用次数: 1

摘要

到目前为止,印度一直抵制美国提出的单独立法来监管商业秘密的要求。报告和研究明确表明,这种保护是可取的。这也是TRIPs规定的最低要求的一部分。印度在辩护中重申,普通法下存在有效保护商业秘密的机制。本文主要考察了印度1957年版权法(Copyright Act)和1872年合同法(Contract Act)的相关机制,并提供证据表明,在印度,通过这些法律来决定商业秘密问题破坏了版权的基本前提,并且忽视了将机密信息视为机密的问题。本文论述了《著作权法》中提及的文学作品及其在司法判决中的法律地位。这形成了支持对商业秘密进行特殊保护的第一个论据。支持独特的商业秘密保护模式的第二个论点是,保留受合同监管的信息的机密性。首先,这方面在印度案件的证据中没有得到充分的审查。其次,根据1857年《印度合同法》(《合同法》),只要审查保密要素,它就会被规避或忽略。因此,这妨碍了在这些判例法中对机密信息的理解。因此,本研究表明,法院通过解读什么构成商业秘密,公然干涉了双方之间关于保密信息的合同义务的基本前提。正是程序性和实质性领域的这一缺陷构成了关于特殊保护模式的第二个论点。本文的结论解决了印度现有的商业秘密保护模式急需的制度变革,这不仅是外部推动的结果(这是国际压力和印度在优先观察名单上的持续存在所必需的),也是印度法院裁决事项的内部优柔寡断的结果。
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Locating Trade Secrets under Indian Laws: A Sui Generis Mode of Protection
India has so far resisted the push from the United States of America (USA) to bring about separate legislation that regulates trade secrets. Reports and studies categorically show that such protection is desirable. It also forms part of the minimum requirements under TRIPs. In its defence, India has reiterated that mechanisms under common law exist to effectively protect trade secrets. This paper looks into these mechanisms, primarily the Indian Copyright Act, 1957 (Copyright Act) and the Indian Contract Act, 1872 (Contract Act), and provides evidence to show that deciding on trade secret issues via these Acts in India undermines the basic premise of copyright, and ignores issues of treating confidential information as confidential. Literary work as mentioned in the Copyright Act and the settled position of law by judicial decisions is discussed in this paper. This forms the first argument in favour of sui generis protection for trade secrets. The second argument in favour of the sui generis mode of protection for trade secrets is that of retaining the confidentiality of information that is regulated by contracts. This aspect is, firstly, under-examined in evidence in the Indian cases. Secondly, under the Indian Contract Act, 1857, (Contract Act) whenever the elements of confidentiality are to be examined, it is circumvented or ignored. This thereby impedes the understanding of confidential information in these case laws. Hence, this study shows that courts have overtly interfered in the basic premise of contractual obligations vis-a-vis confidential information between two parties by reading into what constitutes a trade secret. It is this lacuna in both procedural and substantive fields that holds up the second argument for a sui generis mode of protection. The conclusions from this paper address a much-required regime change in the pre-existing model of protection of trade secrets in India not only as a result of the external push (that is necessitated by international pressure and India’s continued presence on the Priority Watch List) but also as a result of the internal indecisiveness in deciding matters before the Indian courts.
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