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I just don't think trade secrets are relevant in this case. It stops being a trade secret when you leave it in a bar. If the Apple employee was not authorized to bring it to a bar, that could be a problem for him. But since Gizmodo made no effort to induce anyone to expose Apple's trade secrets, it's very unlikely that they will be held accountable for doing so. They bought a stolen phone that happened to be a good news story.

It's just an unfortunate set of events, not a crime.

Now, the "stolen goods", OTOH, could get them in trouble, but that applies to any phone ever left in a bar. I bet if I lost my phone in the bar, no computer crimes unit would be investigating. I'd probably just be laughed at.

Apple's phone should be no more special, under the law, than mine.

The difficulty there, however, will be proving that the phone is worth $400. If I pay you $10,000 for your toenail clippings, that doesn't make them worth $10,000. That makes me an idiot.

My estimate is that no charges will come of this. I also assume the guy at Apple won't be on the "testing our super-secret prototypes" team anymore.




Again, the only source of the "left in a bar" story is Gizmodo. That may be the story the seller told them, but it hasn't been confirmed by anyone else.

If the seller "acquired" it by more overt means, they have plenty of reason to lie about it. Particularly if they "acquired" it after noticing it wasn't an ordinary iPhone, at which point things really do start to drift into trade-secret territory.


IIRC it was confirmed that the engineer was at a bar because he had updated Facebook (via the phone) mentioning the delicious German beer he was drinking (hence the German airline offering him tickets to Germany).


...because once you're at a bar, it's only possible to loose things, not to have them stolen?


Hmm, I may have replied to the wrong comment, or misread it. I only meant to say that the device wasn't stolen from Apple campus, not that it couldn't have been stolen at the bar.


Two facts corroborate Gizmodo's story. One is that the iPhone was disguised to be an older model. If it were just a model designed to sit on a test bench, I doubt it would be camouflaged. If it were intended to be tested in bars, however, then that makes sense.

Secondly, the identity of the Apple employee was released. He has a great incentive to say, "someone came into my lab and threatened to stab me if I didn't hand over the prototype". But, he has not denied the lost-in-a-bar story, even though he has an incentive to do so.

So I think the "story" is probably right.


I don't think Powell's public silence to date indicates anything other than the fact that Apple hasn't authorized him to discuss it in public. (Most large companies wouldn't under the circumstances, it's not an Apple thing.)

If the phone was in fact stolen from him, he has no reason to comment in public right now--his job is safe and his name'll be cleared by the investigation.


OK, but UTSC addresses the idea that a trade secret could be acquired 'by accident or mistake'. When the guy found it and popped the cover, he guessed what it was but the general public did not know. So he got that info thanks to the employee's mistake. If he had locked it away or returned it, none of us would know.

Gizmodo might be idiotic for paying $5000, but more likely they thought it was a prototype, which would be newsworthy. And nothing forced them to post 20 pictures of the internals after deciding it was real. Up to that point, the internals were secret and not even the finder knew what they looked like.

I'm willing to wager $10 on it if you like :)


They KNEW it was not a prototype.


?


The difficulty there, however, will be proving that the phone is worth $400.

In the US, a completely unsubsidized current-generation (3GS) iPhone carries a sticker price of at least $499. It's unlikely that an as-yet-unreleased next-gen model would be worth over $99 less than that.


It has an established market value of $5,000. The fact that it was unreleased and secret increases its value quite substantially.


The difficulty there, however, will be proving that the phone is worth $400.

This phone isn't in production yet. You can put a much higher value on a "prototype", including all the R&D, tooling expense, new materials, etc etc etc.

And what if the 4G retails for $1,999? How about $499,999? You can't prove it won't at this point, can you? Saying the older model is the example for the cost of the new one isn't a logical connection in a court of law.


You can open it up and start adding up the costs of the electronic components inside.


Sure, and Apple can say "that 4G had a new processor chip. We've only built 10 to date and spent 40 million dollars on designing it, doing revisions, and renting fab time to make these 10."

Now the phone is worth 4 million dollars.


The law above pretty clearly covers the "Oops, I found it in a bar!" scenario:

...steals, or without authorization appropriates, takes, carries away, or conceals, or by fraud, artifice, or deception obtains such information...

Appropriates? Takes? Carries away? Yes.


But trade secret? No.

And that's the foundation of the law -- "A trade secret, as defined under 18 U.S.C. § 1839(3) (A), (B) (1996), has three parts: (1) information; (2) reasonable measures taken to protect the information; and (3) which derives independent economic value from not being publicly known."

In this case, reasonable measures were not taken to protect the information. That makes it a cool new gadget that Steve Jobs wants to surprise everyone with, not a trade secret. And that category has no special legal protection.


Two things...one is that one can't just shop around for the most favorable jurisdiction. The other is that although you insist taking the thing to a bar was not a reasonable effort at secrecy, you also argue that it was quite effectively camoflagued for that specific purpose.

Sounds like a reasonable measure to preserve secrecy to me.


It was effectively stolen from a bar. For all we know it was totally stolen, not "lost and not returned and stolen by default." It was wrapped in a very special case in order to disguise that it was a new model.

Gizmodo opened it up and shared its guts, which were of course, totally secret up to that point.

Your definition of "reasonable measures" and the court's are going to be two very separate things.


The taking it to the bar at all was likely a reveal of the secret.




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