Title: The Third Party Problem: Assessing the Protection of Information Through Tort Law
Abstract: A lot of attention has been paid in recent years to the question whether intellectual property (patents, copyrights, trademarks, and trade secrets) and other forms of information are property. To many owners and creators of information, the characterization of information as property provides the moral and legal imperative for its protection. This article transcends the property/not property debate to focus instead on what seems to be at the heart of the information industry’s interest in greater protection for information: curing what I refer to as “the third party problem.”Currently, information owners can use a combination of legal doctrines – principally copyright, trade secret, and contract law – to protect information that they voluntarily choose to share with others. However, none of these bodies of law provide absolute protection, particularly with respect to information that falls into the hands of a third party; that is, a person with whom the information owner does not have a direct relationship. The question addressed by this article is: Given the incomplete solutions to the third party problem that are provided by copyright, trade secret, and contract law, should information owners be given additional means of protecting their information and, if so, why? To answer the foregoing question, the article focuses on the public policy rationales that underlie existing doctrines of third party liability. It begins with a brief overview of the existing means of protecting information with particular emphasis on the policy reasons behind the limitations that are placed on such protection. Obviously, any effort to expand the protection that is currently provided for information must consider why such protection is limited and whether there is a sufficient public policy basis for altering such limits. As discussed in the final section of this article, the challenge for information owners who want additional solutions to the third-party problem is to articulate a sufficient rationale for such protection while respecting the important public policy that underlies the existing limitations. Merely labeling information as a form of property does not go far enough. Instead, they must either explain how and why the acts of a third-party constitute actionable independent wrongs or identify ancillary benefits to society that make the imposition of third-party liability without fault worthwhile.
Publication Year: 2009
Publication Date: 2009-10-30
Language: en
Type: book-chapter
Indexed In: ['crossref']
Access and Citation
Cited By Count: 6
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