Mitchell Hamline School of Law Mitchell Hamline Open Access Faculty Scholarship 2014 Lost in the Cloud: Information Flows and the Implications of Cloud Computing for Trade Secret Protection Sharon Sandeen Mitchell Hamline School of Law,
[email protected] Publication Information 19 Virginia Journal of Law and Technology 1 (2014) This article orginally appeared on the Virginia Journal of Law and Technology (VJOLT) website: www.vjolt.net Repository Citation Sandeen, Sharon, "Lost in the Cloud: Information Flows and the Implications of Cloud Computing for Trade Secret Protection" (2014). Faculty Scholarship. 405. http://open.mitchellhamline.edu/facsch/405 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by Mitchell Hamline Open Access. It has been accepted for inclusion in Faculty Scholarship by an authorized administrator of Mitchell Hamline Open Access. For more information, please contact
[email protected]. Lost in the Cloud: Information Flows and the Implications of Cloud Computing for Trade Secret Protection Abstract As has been noted elsewhere, the advent of digital technology and the Internet has greatly increased the risk that a company’s trade secrets will be lost through the inadvertent or intentional distribution of such secrets. The dva ent of cloud computing adds another dimension to this risk by placing actual or potential trade secrets in the hands of a third-party: the cloud computing service. This article explores the legal and practical implications of cloud computing as they relate to trade secret protection. While there are many types of cloud computing services, this article focuses on cloud-based services that offer businesses the ability to upload and store information and data remotely via the Internet (hereinafter “cloud storage services”).