1. Obtain the right holder’s business secrets through theft, inducement, coercion or other unfair means. Theft generally refers to obtaining trade secrets by stealing the carrier of trade secrets; inducement refers to using money, items or other benefits as bait to make people who know the contents of trade secrets provide trade secrets.
2. Coercion refers to intimidating and threatening people who know trade secrets, forcing others to provide trade secrets. Other unfair means refer to other unfair means other than theft, inducement, and coercion, such as snatching drawings containing trade secrets.
3. Disclose, use or allow others to use the right holder’s business secrets obtained through the first method above. Disclosure refers to informing the right holder’s competitors or other persons of illegally obtained trade secrets, or making the contents of the trade secrets public.
4. Use refers to using one’s illegally obtained trade secrets for production or business operations; allowing others to use refers to allowing others to use one’s own trade secrets for production or business operations, including paid and unpaid Two situations.
Extended information
Relevant legal knowledge:
Commercial crimes can be classified according to different standards. Based on the different nature of commercial activities, commercial crimes can be classified into Crimes are divided into commercial crimes in the process of commodity production, commercial crimes in the process of commodity exchange or circulation, commercial crimes in commercial service activities and commercial crimes in commercial credit activities;
The society invaded by commercial crimes Depending on the relationship, commercial crimes can be divided into crimes of producing and selling counterfeit and inferior goods, crimes of endangering the normal activities of companies and enterprises, crimes of endangering financial and credit activities, crimes of endangering tax collection and administration, crimes of disrupting the order of market activities; and so on.
Crime in commercial service activities refers to the serious behavior of commercial entities that violate relevant service management regulations when engaging in commercial service activities. Including: the crime of forced service (forced transaction), the crime of intentionally providing false intermediary certification documents, the crime of damaging business reputation, the crime of tax evasion, etc.
Baidu Encyclopedia-Crime of Infringement of Trade Secrets