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An Executive's Guide to Information Asset Management, Including Sarbanes-Oxley Accounting Requirements for Trade Secrets by R. Mark Halligan and Richard F. Weyand Click Here to order your copy.
Trade Secret Asset Management provides essential understanding of the legal, security,
and accounting issues surrounding trade secret assets. The legal discussion
includes the definition of trade secrets, their importance to the corporation, and
the manner in which they are defended or lost. Security issues include protecting
trade secrets against insider and outsider theft, and the often neglected issue of
inbound security. The accounting section details the processes of inventory, identification,
valuation, and reporting of trade secrets, and concludes with a
discussion of new corporate responsibilities for trade secret assets under the
Sarbanes-Oxley Act.
From the 120-year-old formula for Coca-Cola to yesterday's enhancements to
Google's search technology, trade secrets drive the competitive advantage and
shareholder value of today's corporations. Trade Secret Asset Management is the
only book written for the executive suite that provides the knowledge and understanding
required to take maximum advantage of the corporation's most valuable
property—its trade secrets. |
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| R. Mark Halligan is a trial lawyer and teaches advanced trade secrets law and trade secret litigation at John Marshall Law School in Chicago. He is widely recognized as the country's leading expert in trade secrets law and the Economic Espionage Act of 1996. |
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| Richard F. Weyand is the president of The Trade Secret Office, Inc., which is developing management methods and software for the automated discovery, inventory, valuation, and tracking of trade secret intellectual property. He has served as a testifying technical expert in trade secrets cases and is a computer forensic examiner. |
R. Mark Halligan, Esq. |