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Keep it Secret

The most effective way to protect ideas is to keep them as a trade secret, but figuring out how to protect an idea can take a fair amount of effort. You will need to screen everyone you do business with, from employees to your partners, ask everyone to sign a Non-Disclosure Agreement before accessing the confidential information, and ensure that the invention is used in a manner that protects its secrecy. The good news is, if the invention derives independent economic value (increases your profits, basically), implementing these measures will qualify you for protection under the Uniform Trade Secrets Act (UTSA). The UTSA, enacted in almost the entire U.S., except for the states of New York, North Carolina, and Massachusetts, is designed to protect trade secrets from misappropriation by enabling injunctive relief and damages against parties that obtained your idea through improper means, such as espionage or theft.

Get a Provisional Patent

The UTSA does not protect you from legitimate means of coming up with the same idea, such as reverse engineering or independently coming up with the same invention. In this case, filing for a Provisional Patent with the United States Patent and Trademark Office can be a good alternative. It will grant you a 12-month period for filing a proper, non-provisional patent application. Once you file the non-provisional application, the patent protection you receive will be retroactively applied all the way to the filing date for the provisional application, rather than starting at the filing date for the Non-Provisional application.  

Please note: This page offers general legal information, not but not legal advice tailored for your specific legal situation. Rocket Lawyer Incorporated isn't a law firm or a substitute for one. For further information on this topic, you can Ask a Legal Pro.


Written and Reviewed by Experts
Written and Reviewed by Experts
This article was created, edited and reviewed by trained editorial staff who specialize in translating complex legal topics into plain language.

At Rocket Lawyer, we believe legal information should be both reliable and easy to understand—so you don't need a law degree to feel informed. We follow a rigorous editorial policy to ensure every article is helpful, clear, and as accurate and up-to-date as possible.

About this page:

  • This article was written and reviewed by Rocket Lawyer editorial staff
  • This article was last reviewed or updated on Nov 27, 2023

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