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Articles + Publications September 17, 2025
As generative artificial intelligence (AI) programs become more commonplace and more powerful, they in turn become more useful — and present more risks. But what can a company do if a generative AI program recreates its most closely guarded trade secret?
Fortunately, judges are showing signs of readily adapting to this new landscape, and recent judicial decisions are shedding some light on how trade secrets can be protected in the age of AI. The few courts that have addressed this specific issue to date have largely been able to fit the issues into the framework provided by existing law.
When it comes to trade secrets, the applicable law is the federal Defend Trade Secrets Act (DTSA), along with similar state laws. (For simplicity’s sake, we’ll refer to analogous federal and state trade secret laws as “the DTSA.) Under the DTSA, a trade secret is generally a piece or compilation of information which has independent economic value because it is kept secret from others, particularly competitors. The DTSA protects trade secrets from unlawful misappropriation, which means using improper means to acquire a trade secret or using a trade secret with knowledge (or a reason to know) that it was improperly acquired.
Generally, reverse engineering — the process of lawfully purchasing a product, taking it apart, and figuring out how to reconstruct it — is not a violation of the DTSA. See18 U.S.C. § 1839 ([T]he term ‘improper means’ [under the DTSA]…does not include reverse engineering…). However, if that process is taken over by a generative AI program, directed by a person who uses targeted prompts to attempt to recreate a trade secret, the conduct may cross the line from reconstruction into misappropriation.
One recent case in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit demonstrates that use of a computer program to process inhuman amounts of data can constitute an improper taking of trade secrets, even if the method used to gather the data is generally lawful. In Compulife Software, Inc. v. Newman et al., the plaintiff’s trade secret was a database of insurance quotes. The plaintiff’s website was public and allowed individuals to pull insurance quotes from its database, but the plaintiff guarded the structure of the database and restricted access to the full database. The Eleventh Circuit found that the defendants used a “scraping” program (a type of lawful program used to gather information for targeted advertising, journalism, and other purposes) to carry out a targeted attack on the database. The scraping program successfully scraped millions of proprietary insurance quotes from the plaintiff’s trade secret database. Although the defendants did not take the entire trade secret, they gained access to enough of the database to harm the plaintiff’s business. The Eleventh Circuit determined that the defendants wrongfully acquired the plaintiff’s trade secrets by using the “scraping” program to gather inhuman amounts of data.
Another case currently pending in the U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts, OpenEvidence, Inc. v. Pathway Medical, Inc. and Louis Mullie, illustrates how a bad actor might use a generative AI program to reconstruct a competitor’s proprietary technology and trade secrets. In that case, the target of the alleged attack was the generative AI program itself. The defendants allegedly used false credentials to log in to the plaintiff’s AI platform, then used targeted prompts to bypass the restrictions placed on the generative AI and convince it to disclose the instructions and algorithms which formed the basis of its functions. In that way, the defendants allegedly sought to reconstruct the generative AI program itself and create their own, competitive program. Although the court has not yet substantively addressed the allegations, the case is an excellent example of how generative AI could be used to discover sensitive or trade secret information.
Extrapolating from these cases, it is easy to see how generative AI models may pose a risk to trade secrets. Generative AI models are typically trained on vast amounts of publicly available data, which may be gathered using processes similar to “scraping.” Each time a user inputs a prompt or uploads a file for the program to analyze, additional data is added to the generative AI program for its later use. And although generative AI models typically create new outputs, rather than regurgitating the data inputs, a bad actor crafting the right prompts may be able to recreate some of that training data, including trade secrets.
These risks exist even if the generative AI model has never actually “seen” the underlying trade secret. Commentators believe that generative AI models may be able to find patterns in vast libraries of input data and identify correlations that humans may not readily see, allowing the generative AI program to reconstruct a competitor’s product or trade secret simply by having greater access to information, and more processing power, than any human. In that case — and assuming that the human user of the AI was not acting improperly — it is possible that a court would find that the trade secret was lawfully reverse engineered by the generative AI. Another complicating factor in these types of analyses is that it is often difficult (or impossible) to ascertain what information was used to train a generative AI model, and that process itself can be a trade secret.
Although there are few cases yet addressing these issues, the DTSA is flexible enough to adapt to new technologies and new methods of misappropriation. We expect that as these cases come before the courts, the contours of the law will shift to account for these new challenges.
Companies with protectable trade secrets should continue to take reasonable precautions to safeguard those trade secrets from disclosure or use. In the age of generative AI, those safeguards should include instructing and training employees not to input trade secret or sensitive information or documents into a public AI tool, and may also require updates to nondisclosure or confidentiality agreements in order to prevent former employees from recreating trade secrets through targeted prompts to a generative AI program.
Sponsored Events
Venture Atlanta 2025
October 15 – 16, 2025
The Woodruff Arts Center and Atlanta Symphony Hall
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Cherrystone Angel Group – Pitch Night 2025
October 14, 2025
CIC Providence
225 Dyer Street, Providence, RI
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October 14 – 15, 2025
Pennsylvania Convention Center
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PLI Broker/Dealer Regulation and Enforcement 2025
October 9, 2025 | 4:00 PM – 5:00 PM ET
1177 Avenue of the Americas, Entrance on 45th Street, New York, NY 10036
Leading the energy evolution.
Learn more
From compliance to the courtroom, we have you covered.
Learn more
Helping you focus on what matters – improving human health.
Learn more
Trusted advisors to leading insurers for 100+ years.
Learn more
Unlocking value in the middle market and beyond.
Learn more
Full-service legal advice from coast to coast.
Learn more
Applying radical applications of common sense
Explore More
Our standard-setting client experience program.
Explore more
Delivering life-changing help to those most in need.
Explore More
Our firm’s greatest asset is our people.
Explore More
Market-leading eDiscovery and data management services.
Explore more
The Pepper Center for Public Services
Explore more
Strategies helps businesses and individuals solve the complexities of dealing with the government at every level. Our team of specialists concentrate exclusively on government affairs, representing clients nationwide who need assistance with public policy, advocacy, and government relations strategies.
This unique program provides innovative and affordable opportunities to startups and early-stage emerging companies with a solid technology or scientific foundation. We help companies that have a quality management team in place and do not have other significant legal representation.
eMerge’s lawyers and technologists work together to deliver strategic end-to-end eDiscovery and data management solutions for litigation, investigations, due diligence, and compliance matters. We help clients discover the information necessary to resolve disputes, respond to investigations, conduct due diligence, and comply with legal requirements.
Stay ahead of the curve and in touch with our latest thinking on the issues that are top of mind across our practices and industry sectors.
Change happens fast in today’s turbulent world. Stay on top of the latest with our industry-specific channels.
Take a closer look at how we partner with clients to help them realize their goals.