Thursday, April 2, 2026

The Locked Mind — Post 5: The State Patchwork

The Locked Mind — FSA Human Capital Architecture Series · Post 5 of 6

Previous: Post 4 — The Non-Compete Economy

What follows has never appeared in any employment law curriculum, labor economics analysis, or corporate governance history.

The world was reading an employment contract. FSA is reading the architecture that converted what a worker knows into corporate property — and the geographic lottery that determines whether those chains hold.

THE SAME CONTRACT · FIFTY DIFFERENT ANSWERS

Two software engineers. Same non-compete clause. Same NDA. Same trade secret exposure. Same job title at competing companies. One works in San Jose, California. One works in Austin, Texas.

The San Jose engineer leaves for a competitor. California Business and Professions Code §16600 voids the non-compete as a matter of law — regardless of what the contract says, regardless of what state the employer is incorporated in, regardless of whether the contract contains a Texas choice-of-law clause. The non-compete is unenforceable. The NDA still applies to specific trade secrets. The Inevitable Disclosure Doctrine is rejected under California public policy. The engineer starts Monday.

The Austin engineer leaves for the same competitor. Texas enforces non-competes if they are ancillary to an otherwise enforceable agreement, supported by consideration, and reasonable in scope, geography, and duration. The former employer files for a temporary restraining order in Travis County. The TRO is granted ex parte. The engineer cannot start the new job while the injunction hearing is pending. The new employer withdraws the offer rather than absorb the litigation risk. The engineer is unemployed.

Same contract. Same facts. Different state. Different outcome. The chains hold in Austin. They don't hold in San Jose. The worker's rights are a function of geography — not of the contract they signed, not of the work they do, not of the secrets they actually hold.

Whether the knowledge in your head belongs to you or to your former employer is determined by which state you work in.

Not by what you actually know. Not by what your contract says. Not by whether you hold a single genuine trade secret. The geographic lottery of worker rights — fifty states, fifty different answers — is the architecture's most revealing structural feature. The same worker, doing the same job, is either free or chained depending on the zip code.

THE STATE MAP — THE SPECTRUM FROM FREE TO LOCKED

FSA — The State Non-Compete Spectrum · 2026

Full Ban / Near-Ban · Worker-Free States

California, Minnesota, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Wyoming. Non-competes void as a matter of public policy for virtually all workers regardless of salary, position, or access to trade secrets. California's 2024 legislation (AB 1076/SB 699) additionally made it unlawful — not just unenforceable — to even enter into a non-compete, with civil liability for violations. Private right of action with attorney fees. The strongest worker-protective regime in the world for non-competes outside the EU mandatory compensation model.

Salary Thresholds · Partial Protection

Colorado, Illinois, Washington, Oregon, Nevada. Non-competes prohibited for workers below defined salary thresholds (ranging from approximately $30,000 to $150,000 depending on the state and role). Above the threshold: reasonableness test applies. Illinois additionally requires garden leave — compensation during the non-compete period — for non-competes above its threshold. Washington limits duration to 18 months. The threshold model protects lower-wage workers while leaving higher earners exposed to the full architecture.

Reasonableness Test · Middle Ground

Most states — New York, Pennsylvania, Virginia, Ohio, Michigan, and others. Non-competes enforced if reasonable in scope, geography, and duration — and supported by adequate consideration (typically continued employment or a specific benefit). Courts apply a three-factor reasonableness analysis. Outcomes are highly fact-specific and unpredictable. The litigation uncertainty itself functions as a deterrent to worker mobility — even where the non-compete might ultimately be found unreasonable, the cost of establishing that is $3 million.

Strong Enforcement · Employer-Favorable

Texas, Florida (pre-2024 reforms), Georgia, Virginia (historically). Non-competes enforced broadly with courts permitted to "blue pencil" — modify — overbroad clauses to make them enforceable rather than voiding them entirely. The blue-pencil rule is the employer's safety net: draft the non-compete as broadly as possible, knowing the court will narrow it to an enforceable scope rather than strike it. The drafting incentive is to maximize scope. The judicial incentive is to find some enforceable version. The blue-pencil doctrine converts judicial review from a protection into a correction mechanism — the employer's overreach is trimmed to fit rather than penalized. The architecture rewards aggressive drafting.

THE CHOICE-OF-LAW PROBLEM — HOW EMPLOYERS ROUTE AROUND BANS

FSA — The Choice-of-Law Architecture · How Employers Export Their Favorable State Law

A Texas-headquartered company hires a software engineer who will work remotely from California. The employment contract contains a clause: "This agreement shall be governed by the laws of Texas." The non-compete that follows is drafted under Texas law — which enforces non-competes subject to a reasonableness test. The California engineer who signs believes they are in California. Their employer's legal department has already transported them to Texas.

California's 2024 legislation attempted to address this directly — declaring that California's non-compete ban applies regardless of choice-of-law clause and regardless of where the contract was signed. But federal courts have produced conflicting rulings on how far California's reach extends. The First Circuit (2024) declined to apply California's ban where the employee had no prior California connection and the contract contained a Massachusetts choice-of-law clause. A DraftKings case allowed enforcement of an out-of-state non-compete against an employee who later moved to California. The extraterritorial reach of California's ban remains contested in 2026.

The choice-of-law clause is the architectural instrument that allows employers to select the most favorable state law regardless of where the worker actually works. The worker in California signs a Texas-governed contract. The worker in Minnesota signs an Illinois-governed contract. The worker's state ban is irrelevant — the employer has already chosen the governing law. The geographic lottery is not random. It is the outcome of contract drafting by the party with the lawyers on retainer.

THE INTERNATIONAL CONTRAST — HOW OTHER COUNTRIES ANSWER THE QUESTION

FSA — The International Architecture · What Other Systems Require

The United States' state-law patchwork — with its range from full bans to aggressive enforcement — exists within a global context where most developed economies have adopted a more structurally consistent approach: if you want to restrict a worker's post-employment mobility, you pay for it.

Germany: Non-competes enforceable up to two years but require compensation during the restriction period — at least 50% of the employee's most recent compensation. If the employer does not pay the compensation the employee is not bound. The employer must decide whether the restriction is worth the cost.

France: Non-competes require compensation of 30–100% of salary during the restriction period. Unsigned or uncompensated non-competes are void. The compensation requirement converts the non-compete from a one-sided property claim into a bilateral transaction.

FSA reading: The mandatory compensation requirement in European non-compete regimes is the most structurally revealing difference from the US system. It forces employers to make an explicit economic calculation: is this worker's post-employment mobility worth paying 50% of their salary for two years to restrict? The US system requires no such calculation — the non-compete is free to include, costs nothing to maintain, and delivers wage suppression regardless of whether any genuine trade secret is at risk. The European system aligns incentives with legitimate protection purposes. The US system aligns incentives with maximum extraction at minimum cost.

⚡ FSA Live Node — The 2026 State Reform Wave

With the federal ban defeated, state-level reform has become the primary legislative battleground. In 2025 and 2026 legislative sessions multiple states have advanced non-compete reform bills — following the pattern of salary thresholds, duration limits, and mandatory notice requirements. No additional states have adopted full bans matching California's model. Several states — including New York, which has a particularly active legislative debate given its concentration of financial services employers — have advanced threshold bills that stalled in committee.

The UK is conducting an active consultation on non-compete reform — explicitly citing the EU mandatory compensation model and the economic evidence on wage suppression and innovation drag. The Netherlands passed new requirements effective approximately 2026-2027 requiring stronger justification for non-competes on permanent contracts. The international reform momentum is visible. The US federal reform momentum is, for now, defeated. The state-by-state patchwork continues to determine whether the same worker doing the same job is free or chained.

California: free. Texas: possibly chained. Illinois: chained above threshold with some compensation. Germany: chained but paid. The worker's rights are a geographic and contractual lottery. The architecture exploits the lottery. The lottery runs.

THE FRAME CALLBACK

Post 1: You signed it on day one. You didn't read it. It follows you forever.

Post 2: The NDA creates the trade secret. The trade secret enforces the NDA. The circularity is the architecture.

Post 3: The injunction precedes the wrongdoing. The chains are pre-emptive.

Post 4: At scale it is not a trade secret protection mechanism. It is a wage suppression mechanism.

Post 5 adds the patchwork principle:

Post 5 — The State Patchwork

The geographic lottery of worker rights is not random. It is the outcome of contract drafting by the party with lawyers on retainer.

The choice-of-law clause routes around the worker's state ban. The blue-pencil doctrine rewards aggressive drafting. Germany requires compensation. The US requires nothing. The same worker doing the same job is free or chained depending on a contractual clause they signed before lunch on their first day and almost certainly didn't read.

Final Post — Post 6 of 6

The Locked Mind Closes. 2026. The FTC ban defeated. The state reform wave advancing slowly. The employer playbook tightened. The AI knowledge question unresolved. The five principles close. What the worker can do right now — the practical FSA reading of their own employment contract. And whether the architecture that locked 30 million minds is approaching its Sandoval moment — or whether the chains, like the grant boundaries, hold because every force that benefits from them is more powerful than every force that would cut them.

```

FSA Certified Node

Primary sources: California Business & Professions Code §16600, AB 1076, SB 699 (2024) — public record. Texas Business & Commerce Code §15.50 — public record. Illinois Freedom to Work Act — public record. First Circuit non-compete choice-of-law ruling (2024) — public record. German non-compete compensation requirements — HGB §74 — public record. French Labour Code non-compete provisions — public record. UK non-compete consultation (2026) — public record. All sources public record.

Human-AI Collaboration

This post was developed through an explicit human-AI collaborative process as part of the Forensic System Architecture (FSA) methodology.

Randy Gipe · Claude / Anthropic · 2026

Trium Publishing House Limited · The Locked Mind Series · Post 5 of 6 · thegipster.blogspot.com

The Locked Mind — Post 4: The Non-Compete Economy

The Locked Mind — FSA Human Capital Architecture Series · Post 4 of 6

Previous: Post 3 — The Inevitable Disclosure Doctrine

What follows has never appeared in any employment law curriculum, labor economics analysis, or corporate governance history.

The world was reading an employment contract. FSA is reading the architecture that converted what a worker knows into corporate property — and what 30 million of those contracts produce at scale across the American labor market.

THE SANDWICH SHOP

The non-compete agreement was designed for the senior executive with genuine access to trade secrets — the William Redmond of PepsiCo v. Redmond, with strategic pricing data and competitive intelligence that a rival could deploy immediately. The architecture Post 1 documented makes sense — at least theoretically — at that level of the labor market.

Jimmy John's — the sandwich chain — required its sandwich makers and delivery drivers to sign non-compete agreements prohibiting them from working for any business that "derives more than 10% of its revenue from selling submarine, hero-type, deli-style, pita, and/or wrapped or rolled sandwiches" within three miles of any Jimmy John's location for two years after leaving. Not the regional manager. Not the franchise owner. The sandwich maker. The delivery driver. The person who earns minimum wage making sub sandwiches was subject to the same legal instrument designed to protect the cognitive assets of Fortune 500 executives.

Jimmy John's eventually settled a state attorney general action and abandoned the practice. But the case became the most visible illustration of what FSA maps as the non-compete economy's most structurally revealing feature: the instrument designed for executives is applied as boilerplate to every level of the workforce — because the costs of drafting it are fixed and the benefits of having it are real regardless of whether it would survive legal challenge.

The non-compete was designed to protect genuine trade secrets held by senior executives.

It is applied as boilerplate to 30 million workers — from hedge fund managers to hairdressers to sandwich delivery drivers. At scale it is not a trade secret protection mechanism. It is a wage suppression mechanism. The cognitive enclosure of every worker regardless of whether they hold a single protectable secret.

THE ECONOMICS — WHAT THE RESEARCH SHOWS

FSA — The Non-Compete Economy · What The Evidence Shows

Wage Suppression

Multiple studies using state law changes as natural experiments — comparing wages before and after states tightened or loosened non-compete enforcement — find consistent wage suppression effects. A worker covered by a non-compete has reduced bargaining power: they cannot credibly threaten to take a competing offer because acting on that threat would trigger litigation. Employers know this. Wage negotiations reflect it. Estimates of the wage premium that would result from a national non-compete ban range from 3% to 14% of average earnings — representing $300 to $500 billion in aggregate wages annually that are currently being captured by employers rather than paid to workers.

Innovation Drag

NBER Working Paper 31487 (Johnson, Lipsitz & Pei, 2023/2024) — the most rigorous recent causal study — finds that stricter non-compete enforcement reduces citation-weighted patenting by 16–19% over ten years. The mechanism: employee mobility is the primary channel through which knowledge flows between firms. When workers cannot move their expertise to new environments the knowledge spillovers that drive innovation — the researcher who joins a startup, the engineer who applies techniques learned at one company to problems at another — are suppressed. The non-compete was supposed to protect innovation by securing the inventor's output. The evidence shows it suppresses innovation by blocking the inventor's mobility.

Geographic Distortion

Research on inventor mobility (Marx et al.) found that Michigan's 1985 adoption of stronger non-compete enforcement caused an 8.1% decline in inventor mobility — and that inventors emigrated to non-enforcing states at measurably higher rates. California's non-compete ban is credited as a contributing factor to Silicon Valley's dominance — the free flow of talent between companies, the ability to leave a large company and found a startup without litigation risk, the knowledge spillovers between firms that cluster geographically — all depend on worker mobility. States that enforce non-competes become talent-exporting jurisdictions. The engineers leave for California. The innovation follows them.

The Firm Investment Countervailing Argument — And Its Limits

The empirical literature includes one consistent finding favoring non-compete enforcement: stricter enforcement correlates with higher firm investment in R&D and employee training. The argument is intuitive — if workers cannot take their training to competitors the firm is willing to invest in it. But the NBER study documents that this investment effect is dominated by the mobility effect: firms invest more in R&D under strict enforcement, but the innovation output from that investment — measured by patents and their economic value — is lower. The firms are spending more and producing less. The non-compete suppresses the knowledge spillovers that make innovation productive, and no amount of increased R&D spending compensates for the mobility restriction. The investment argument for non-competes survives the microeconomics. It does not survive the macroeconomics.

THE PROFILES — WHO THE NON-COMPETE ECONOMY ACTUALLY COVERS

FSA — The Non-Compete Economy · Who The Architecture Actually Covers

The FTC's 2024 rulemaking process produced the most comprehensive public data on non-compete prevalence in US history. The data was striking: non-compete agreements were found across virtually every sector and compensation level — from minimum-wage food service workers to physicians earning $500,000 annually. Approximately 18% of all US workers — one in five — reported being currently subject to a non-compete. The distribution was not concentrated among highly compensated workers with access to genuine trade secrets.

Hairdressers / Stylists
Prohibited from working at competing salons within a geographic radius — protecting the "client relationships" of a salon whose clients the stylist built through their own skill and personality.
Yoga Instructors
Prohibited from teaching at competing studios — protecting the "client base" of a yoga studio whose students followed the instructor, not the brand.
Security Guards
Prohibited from working for competing security firms — protecting proprietary knowledge of... security patrol routes.
Physicians
Prohibited from practicing medicine within a geographic radius — blocking patients from following their doctor to a new practice. The FTC cited physician non-competes as reducing competition and increasing healthcare costs in markets where hospital systems use them to maintain monopoly positions.

The non-compete's application to hairdressers, yoga instructors, and security guards is not a misuse of the instrument. It is the instrument working exactly as designed — the employer extracting maximum value from the employment relationship by claiming ownership of the worker's client relationships, geographic mobility, and professional practice area, regardless of whether any genuine trade secret is involved.

THE SILICON VALLEY EXCEPTION — THE NATURAL EXPERIMENT

FSA — The Gilson Hypothesis · California vs. Route 128 · The Evidence

Stanford law professor Ronald Gilson's 1999 paper "The Legal Infrastructure of High Technology Industrial Districts" proposed that California's non-compete ban was a significant contributing factor to Silicon Valley's dominance over Route 128 (Boston's technology corridor) — which had comparable talent, capital, and research infrastructure in the 1970s but fell behind as Silicon Valley's ecosystem of spinouts, startup formation, and talent mobility accelerated.

Massachusetts enforced non-competes. California did not. Engineers in Massachusetts who left large companies to found startups faced litigation risk. Engineers in California who did the same faced none. The talent flowed to where mobility was free. The startups clustered where the talent was. The venture capital followed the startups. The Gilson hypothesis has been tested empirically in multiple subsequent studies — and the NBER findings on inventor mobility and patenting under strict enforcement provide strong supporting evidence.

Massachusetts eventually reformed its non-compete law in 2018 — requiring garden leave compensation and limiting duration. Silicon Valley's advantage had been compounding for four decades by then. The natural experiment ran for forty years. The results are in the economic geography of American technology. The Locked Mind is not a neutral legal instrument. It shapes where innovation clusters and where it does not.

⚡ FSA Live Node — The Post-FTC Employer Playbook · 2025–2026

After the FTC non-compete ban was struck down in August 2024 and the appeal withdrawn in 2025 employment attorneys documented a systematic employer response: tightening NDAs to maximum breadth, increasing use of exit interviews with explicit reminders of confidentiality obligations, expanding trade secret claims in post-employment disputes, and — in states where they remain enforceable — maintaining non-compete clauses as standard boilerplate. The state-level reform wave continued: several states passed new threshold requirements or restrictions in 2025 and 2026 legislative sessions. But the federal floor that would have protected workers in employer-favorable states never materialized.

The employer playbook in 2026: non-competes where enforceable, maximally broad NDAs everywhere, DTSA trade secret claims as a backstop in non-compete ban states, and IDD applications where recognized — four independent instruments covering the complete spectrum of worker mobility, layered so that the failure of any one instrument does not defeat the others. The architecture is redundant by design. California's non-compete ban defeats the non-compete. The DTSA trade secret claim survives in California. The NDA survives in California. The architecture runs.

The FTC ban was the counter-mechanism. It was struck down. The employer playbook tightened. The four chains in the series image still run from the worker's mind to the corporate building. The architecture adapted. The architecture runs.

THE FRAME CALLBACK

Post 1: You signed it on day one. You didn't read it. It follows you forever.

Post 2: The NDA creates the trade secret. The trade secret enforces the NDA. The circularity is the architecture.

Post 3: The injunction precedes the wrongdoing. The chains are pre-emptive. The doctrine doesn't need to win. It needs to file.

Post 4 adds the economy principle:

Post 4 — The Non-Compete Economy

At the individual level the non-compete protects genuine secrets. At scale it suppresses wages, reduces innovation, and distorts labor markets.

$300–500 billion in suppressed wages annually. 16–19% reduction in citation-weighted patenting. Engineers emigrating to California. Hairdressers and yoga instructors and sandwich makers locked by the same instrument designed for executives. The architecture works at every level because the cost of drafting it is fixed and the benefit of having it is real regardless of merit.

Next — Post 5 of 6

The State Patchwork. Fifty states. Fifty different answers to the question of whether the knowledge in your head is yours. California bans non-competes entirely. Illinois enforces them with salary thresholds. Texas enforces almost anything reasonable. The geographic lottery of worker rights — and how choice-of-law clauses allow employers in California to reach into Texas, and employers in Texas to reach into California. The map determines the chains. The chains follow the worker across state lines.

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FSA Certified Node

Primary sources: Johnson, Lipsitz & Pei, NBER Working Paper 31487 (2023/2024) — public record. FTC non-compete rulemaking record (2024) — public record. Gilson, R., "The Legal Infrastructure of High Technology Industrial Districts," Stanford Law Review (1999) — public record. Marx, M. et al., inventor mobility studies — public record. Massachusetts Non-Competition Agreement Act (2018) — public record. Illinois Freedom to Work Act amendments — public record. All sources public record.

Human-AI Collaboration

This post was developed through an explicit human-AI collaborative process as part of the Forensic System Architecture (FSA) methodology.

Randy Gipe · Claude / Anthropic · 2026

Trium Publishing House Limited · The Locked Mind Series · Post 4 of 6 · thegipster.blogspot.com

The Locked Mind — Post 3: The Inevitable Disclosure Doctrine

The Locked Mind — FSA Human Capital Architecture Series · Post 3 of 6

Previous: Post 2 — The Trade Secret

What follows has never appeared in any employment law curriculum, labor economics analysis, or corporate governance history.

The world was reading an employment contract. FSA is reading the architecture that converted what a worker knows into corporate property — and the doctrine that can block a career without requiring any evidence of wrongdoing.

THE INJUNCTION

You have accepted a new job. The new employer has made an offer. You have given notice. You have cleared out your desk. You have not taken a single document. You have not sent yourself a single email. You have not photographed a single screen. You are clean.

Your former employer files for a temporary restraining order. The application is made ex parte — without notifying you first. A judge reviews it. The employer's argument is not that you did anything wrong. The argument is that you cannot possibly do your new job without thinking about what you learned at your old job. The argument is that the knowledge in your head will inevitably flow to your new employer. The argument is that thinking itself is misappropriation.

The judge grants the order. Your new job is blocked. You have committed no act of wrongdoing. You have been enjoined by a theory.

This is the Inevitable Disclosure Doctrine. FSA maps it as the most structurally radical instrument in the Locked Mind architecture — because it requires no proof. It requires only a prediction.

Every other instrument in the Locked Mind architecture requires something the employer can point to.

The NDA requires a confidentiality obligation. The non-compete requires a signed clause. The trade secret requires designated information. The Inevitable Disclosure Doctrine requires nothing except a judge who agrees that your new job is similar enough to your old job that you will inevitably think the wrong thoughts. The injunction precedes the wrongdoing. The chains are pre-emptive.

PEPSICO v. REDMOND — THE LANDMARK

FSA — PepsiCo Inc. v. Redmond · 7th Circuit 1995 · The Doctrine Installed

The Facts

William Redmond was a senior executive at PepsiCo's sports drinks division — managing the All Sport brand, with access to PepsiCo's strategic plans, pricing strategies, and distribution systems for the coming year. He resigned to become Chief Operating Officer of Quaker Oats' Gatorade division — a direct competitor in the sports drinks market. He had signed a confidentiality agreement. He had not signed a non-compete.

The Argument

PepsiCo did not allege that Redmond had taken any documents. Did not allege he had disclosed any trade secrets. Did not allege he had made any improper communications to Gatorade. PepsiCo argued that Redmond could not perform his new role without inevitably drawing on his knowledge of PepsiCo's strategic plans — that his mind had been shaped by confidential information to the degree that his future business decisions would be influenced by it regardless of his intentions. The disclosure would be involuntary. It would be inevitable.

The Ruling

The Seventh Circuit affirmed the preliminary injunction blocking Redmond from starting at Gatorade. The court held that the Inevitable Disclosure Doctrine was a valid basis for injunctive relief under Illinois trade secret law — that a court could enjoin a former employee from taking a new job if disclosure of the former employer's trade secrets was inevitable given the nature of the new role, even without proof of actual disclosure or intent to disclose.

FSA Reading

PepsiCo v. Redmond converted the employee's mind into contested territory. The ruling held that knowledge accumulated through employment — strategic awareness, competitive intelligence, market intuition — could be so thoroughly the employer's property that the employee's future cognitive activity constituted a potential misappropriation. The doctrine does not require the employee to have done anything. It requires only that a court predict what the employee will think. The prediction is the injunction. The injunction blocks the career. The career blocked by a prediction is the Locked Mind in its most complete form.

THE MAP — WHERE THE DOCTRINE RUNS AND WHERE IT DOESN'T

FSA — The IDD State Map · Where Careers Can Be Blocked By Prediction

The Inevitable Disclosure Doctrine is not recognized in all states. Its geographic distribution maps almost perfectly onto the non-compete enforcement map — and the gap between them is the most structurally revealing feature of the entire Locked Mind architecture.

IDD Recognized · Employer-Favorable

Illinois (birthplace — PepsiCo v. Redmond), Pennsylvania, New York (limited recognition), Texas, Virginia, and approximately a dozen additional states. In these states a former employer can seek an injunction based solely on the prediction of inevitable disclosure — no evidence of actual wrongdoing required.

IDD Rejected · Employee-Favorable

California (explicit rejection — the doctrine is incompatible with California's non-compete ban and its strong public policy favoring employee mobility), Colorado, Washington State, and several others. Courts in these states have held that IDD would effectively create a non-compete through the back door — and that without an enforceable non-compete clause the doctrine cannot be used to block employment.

The gap is the finding. California bans non-competes and rejects IDD — the two instruments that most directly block employee mobility are both unavailable. Illinois recognizes both non-competes and IDD — a worker in Illinois who has signed a non-compete and works in a senior role with strategic information can be blocked from a new job by two independent legal instruments simultaneously. The state you work in determines whether your career can be blocked by a prediction.

THE LITIGATION COST AS THE MECHANISM — WHY THE DOCTRINE DOESN'T NEED TO WIN

The Inevitable Disclosure Doctrine is most powerful not when it wins in court — but when it doesn't need to. FSA maps the cost asymmetry that makes the doctrine effective regardless of its legal merit in any specific case.

FSA — The IDD Cost Architecture · Why Losing Is Winning

Defending against a trade secret lawsuit through trial costs an average of $3 million in legal fees. A preliminary injunction hearing — the first stage of an IDD application — costs $50,000–$200,000 to defend, takes 30–90 days to resolve, and during that period the employee cannot start their new job. The new employer, facing a litigation cloud over their new hire, often withdraws the offer rather than absorb the legal risk and the delay.

The former employer does not need to win the injunction hearing. It needs to file the application. The filing creates a litigation cloud. The litigation cloud causes the new employer to withdraw the offer. The career is blocked not by a court ruling but by the cost of fighting for one. The IDD is a threat architecture — effective at the filing stage regardless of its legal merit at the merits stage.

This is the Patent Troll pattern running in employment law. The patent troll's demand letter calibrates the licensing fee below the cost of defense — extraction without a meritorious claim. The IDD application calibrates the litigation threat to produce offer withdrawal before a court rules — career blocking without a successful injunction. Both architectures extract through the cost of resistance, not through the strength of their legal position.

THE NEW EMPLOYER'S DILEMMA — HOW THE ARCHITECTURE SPREADS

FSA — The New Employer Contamination · How IDD Spreads Beyond The Employee

The Inevitable Disclosure Doctrine does not only affect the departing employee. It affects every organization that wants to hire them. A startup that recruits a senior executive from a major competitor faces three simultaneous risks: the executive may be subject to an IDD injunction that blocks their start date, the startup may face a tortious interference claim for inducing the executive to breach their confidentiality obligations, and the startup's own work product may become contaminated — subject to discovery and potential misappropriation claims — if the executive produces work that resembles their former employer's strategic plans.

Sophisticated new employers have developed "clean room" protocols — restricting the new hire from certain projects, requiring them to certify they are not using former employer information, and maintaining documentation of the boundary between what the new hire knew before joining and what they develop after. These protocols impose administrative costs, constrain the new hire's utility, and create a paper trail that the former employer can subpoena.

The IDD architecture reaches into the new employer's operations — turning a hiring decision into a litigation risk that must be managed from day one. The chains from the series image do not only connect the departing employee to their former employer. They connect the new employer to the former employer's legal department.

⚡ FSA Live Node — California's Extraterritorial Pushback · 2024–2026

California's explicit rejection of the Inevitable Disclosure Doctrine — and its 2024 legislation making it unlawful to even enter non-compete agreements regardless of where signed — represents the most aggressive counter-architecture to the Locked Mind in any US jurisdiction. AB 1076 and SB 699 declared California's non-compete ban applies regardless of where the contract was signed or where the employee worked previously. A Texas non-compete signed by an employee who later moves to California is void under California law.

The federal courts have produced conflicting rulings on California's extraterritorial reach. The First Circuit (2024) ruled that California's ban does not override a Massachusetts choice-of-law clause where the employee had no prior California connection. Other circuits have not fully resolved the question. California is exporting its policy. The IDD-enforcing states are resisting. The employee caught between them — working remotely for a California company under a Texas contract — faces genuine legal uncertainty about which state's law governs their mobility.

California says: your mind is your own. Illinois says: your mind belongs to whoever last employed it. The federal government said: we'll ban the practice. The court said: you don't have the authority. The employee in the middle is still waiting for a resolution that has not arrived.

THE FRAME CALLBACK

Post 1: You signed it on day one. You didn't read it. It follows you forever. The knowledge in your head is not yours.

Post 2: The NDA creates the trade secret. The trade secret enforces the NDA. The circularity is the architecture.

Post 3 adds the inevitable disclosure principle:

Post 3 — The Inevitable Disclosure Doctrine

The injunction precedes the wrongdoing. The chains are pre-emptive.

No document taken. No secret disclosed. No wrongdoing committed. A judge agrees that you will inevitably think the wrong thoughts in your new role — and your career is blocked by a prediction. The doctrine doesn't need to win in court. It needs to file. The filing creates the cloud. The cloud withdraws the offer. The architecture works perfectly without a ruling.

Next — Post 4 of 6

The Non-Compete Economy. What 30 million non-compete agreements produce at scale — the suppressed wages, the reduced innovation, the geographic labor market distortions. The NBER data. The UNH innovation value study. The sandwich shop employee with a non-compete. The hairdresser. The yoga instructor. The architecture designed for senior executives applied as boilerplate to every employment relationship regardless of the worker's access to genuine trade secrets. The Closed Door applied not to a profession but to an individual's entire working life.

```

FSA Certified Node

Primary sources: PepsiCo Inc. v. Redmond, 54 F.3d 1262 (7th Cir. 1995) — public record. California Business & Professions Code §16600 — public record. California AB 1076 and SB 699 (2024) — public record. First Circuit ruling on California non-compete extraterritoriality (2024) — public record. Uniform Trade Secrets Act, IDD provisions by state — public record. All sources public record.

Human-AI Collaboration

This post was developed through an explicit human-AI collaborative process as part of the Forensic System Architecture (FSA) methodology.

Randy Gipe 珞 · Claude / Anthropic · 2026

Trium Publishing House Limited · The Locked Mind Series · Post 3 of 6 · thegipster.blogspot.com

Wednesday, April 1, 2026

The Locked Mind — Post 2: The Trade Secret

The Locked Mind — FSA Human Capital Architecture Series · Post 2 of 6

Previous: Post 1 — The Contract

What follows has never appeared in any employment law curriculum, labor economics analysis, or corporate governance history.

The world was reading an employment contract. FSA is reading the architecture that converted what a worker knows into corporate property — and the federal law that made that conversion enforceable across state lines.

WHAT A TRADE SECRET IS SUPPOSED TO BE

The Coca-Cola formula. The Google search algorithm. The KFC spice blend. These are the canonical examples of trade secrets — specific, documented, genuinely valuable pieces of information that give their holders a competitive advantage precisely because they are unknown to competitors.

Trade secret law was designed for these cases. The original common law framework — developed through 19th century English and American courts — protected information that was genuinely secret, had genuine economic value because it was secret, and was protected by genuine efforts to keep it secret. The framework was narrow by design: it protected specific documented secrets, not general knowledge, not industry expertise, not the professional judgment that an experienced worker develops over a career.

FSA maps what happened to that framework between 1979 and 2026.

Trade secret law was designed to protect the Coca-Cola formula.

It now protects the general knowledge any experienced employee accumulates over a career — including knowledge the employee brought to the job before they were hired. The three requirements that were supposed to limit protection have collapsed into one: the NDA you signed on day one. The law protecting secrets is protecting everything.

THE THREE REQUIREMENTS — AND HOW EACH ONE COLLAPSED

FSA — Trade Secret Law · Three Requirements · Three Collapses

Requirement 1 — The Information Must Be Secret

Original meaning: the specific information must not be generally known or readily ascertainable by competitors through proper means. A formula, a process, a specific customer list with pricing terms — genuinely not available outside the organization.

The collapse: Courts have found trade secrets in combinations of generally known elements — holding that the specific combination, even if each component is publicly available, can constitute a secret. Customer lists have been found protectable even when customers are identifiable through public directories — because the employer's specific knowledge of purchasing patterns and preferences is the secret. General industry knowledge held by an experienced employee has been found protectable when the employer can show it was learned on the job and kept confidential. The "secret" requirement has expanded from specific documented information to virtually anything an employer designates as confidential.

Requirement 2 — The Information Must Have Independent Economic Value From Its Secrecy

Original meaning: the information must give its holder a competitive advantage specifically because competitors don't know it. A formula that produces a superior product — valuable because competitors can't replicate it. A process that reduces costs — valuable because competitors pay more.

The collapse: Courts have found economic value in an employee's knowledge of an employer's strategic plans, customer relationships, and internal processes — finding that competitors would benefit from knowing this information, therefore it has value from its secrecy. The standard has shifted from objective competitive advantage to subjective employer interest: if the employer says the information would benefit a competitor, courts have often accepted that as sufficient. An employee's general professional judgment — how they approach problems, what they would recommend — has been found to have economic value from its secrecy in cases where that judgment was developed entirely on the employer's time.

Requirement 3 — Reasonable Efforts To Maintain Secrecy

Original meaning: the employer must take genuine steps to protect the information — locked files, limited access, confidentiality training, marking documents as proprietary. The effort requirement was supposed to screen out employers who wanted trade secret protection for information they hadn't actually treated as secret.

The collapse — and the finding: Courts have found that requiring employees to sign NDAs constitutes "reasonable efforts" to maintain secrecy — even when the NDA is a boilerplate form signed on day one covering all information the employee might encounter. The NDA is simultaneously the instrument that converts information into a trade secret and the evidence that the employer made "reasonable efforts" to protect it. The NDA creates the trade secret. The trade secret enforces the NDA. The circularity is the architecture.

THE DTSA — THE FEDERAL INSTALLATION

FSA — The Defend Trade Secrets Act · 2016 · The Federal Architecture

Before 2016 trade secret law was a state-law patchwork — 48 states had adopted versions of the Uniform Trade Secrets Act, with varying standards and procedures. The Defend Trade Secrets Act (2016) created a federal civil cause of action for trade secret misappropriation — allowing employers to sue in federal court, access federal discovery procedures, and obtain nationwide injunctions against employees regardless of which state they worked in.

The DTSA was sold as modernizing trade secret protection for the digital economy. FSA maps three structural features that the legislative history did not emphasize. First: the DTSA does not preempt state trade secret claims — meaning an employer can bring both federal DTSA claims and state UTSA claims simultaneously, doubling the litigation surface and the defense cost. Second: the DTSA's ex parte seizure provision allows a court to order seizure of a former employee's devices before the employee has been notified of the lawsuit — a provision legal scholars described as unprecedented in civil litigation. Third: the DTSA's "whistleblower immunity" provision — protecting employees who disclose trade secrets to government agencies in the course of reporting suspected violations — was added late and is narrow enough that it provides limited practical protection.

The DTSA is the Creature's Ledger of human capital law: a federal installation that converted a state-law patchwork into a nationally enforceable framework — expanding employer reach across state lines at the moment when California's non-compete ban was beginning to influence other states. The federal trade secret claim follows the worker wherever California's non-compete protection does not reach.

THE KNOWLEDGE YOU BROUGHT — THE PRE-EMPLOYMENT PROBLEM

Trade secret law formally protects only information the employer owns — not the worker's general skills, knowledge, or expertise. Courts say this repeatedly. The principle is clear in theory: an employee can take their general knowledge and skills to a new employer. They cannot take their former employer's specific trade secrets.

In practice this distinction has become nearly unworkable. FSA maps why.

FSA — The Tacit Knowledge Problem · Where The Line Cannot Be Drawn

An engineer who spent five years at a semiconductor company developing expertise in a specific fabrication process has knowledge that is simultaneously: their own professional expertise that they developed through years of work, the employer's trade secret because it was developed on the employer's time using the employer's resources, and inseparable from who they are as a professional because it constitutes the core of their technical judgment.

When this engineer joins a competitor the new employer needs their expertise — that is why they were hired. But the expertise cannot be exercised without drawing on knowledge that the former employer claims as a trade secret. The engineer cannot perform their job without potentially misappropriating trade secrets. The former employer knows this. The lawsuit that follows is not really about preventing disclosure of specific documented information. It is about preventing the engineer from practicing their profession at a competitor.

This is the tacit knowledge trap. The courts say general skills are not trade secrets. But in a knowledge economy the distinction between general skills and specific trade secrets has become impossible to draw — and the litigation cost of attempting to draw it is $3 million. The trap does not require a court ruling to function. The threat of the lawsuit is sufficient.

THE MAJOR CASES — THE ARCHITECTURE IN OPERATION

FSA — Trade Secret Litigation · Case Profiles

Waymo v. Uber (2018)

Anthony Levandowski left Google's self-driving car project and founded Otto, acquired by Uber. Waymo (Google's spinoff) sued alleging he took 14,000 confidential files. Settled for approximately $245 million in Uber equity. The case established that digital file exfiltration before departure is forensically detectable — producing a new norm of exit forensics in high-stakes departures.

Apple v. Rivos (2022)

Apple sued Rivos — a chip startup — and several former Apple chip engineers, alleging they took Apple trade secrets in the form of chip architecture documents. Apple's complaint included allegations about engineers' personal devices and iCloud backups containing Apple documents. The case illustrates the surveillance dimension: employers now forensically examine departing employees' devices, cloud storage, and email history as a standard exit process.

PepsiCo v. Redmond (7th Cir. 1995) — The Inevitable Disclosure Preview

A PepsiCo senior executive left to join Quaker Oats in a similar role. PepsiCo obtained an injunction blocking him from starting despite no evidence of actual trade secret disclosure — arguing he could not perform his new role without inevitably using PepsiCo's strategic plans. This is the Inevitable Disclosure Doctrine in its landmark form. Post 3 maps it in full. Here it appears as the trade secret law's most aggressive extension: the injunction without proof of wrongdoing.

⚡ FSA Live Node — AI And Trade Secret Law · 2026

The most consequential frontier of trade secret law in 2026 is artificial intelligence. When an employee trains an AI model on their employer's proprietary data — customer interactions, internal documents, operational records — and then leaves for a competitor, what have they taken? The model weights? The training methodology? The intuitions the AI has encoded from the employer's data?

No court has fully resolved these questions. But employers are already claiming trade secret protection in AI training datasets, model architectures, and fine-tuning approaches developed by their AI engineers. An AI engineer who leaves to join a competitor brings their expertise in model training — expertise that is inseparable from the specific models they trained on their former employer's proprietary data. The tacit knowledge trap scales with the AI economy: the more valuable the AI system, the more valuable the engineer's knowledge of it — and the more aggressively the former employer will assert trade secret claims against their departure.

The Coca-Cola formula was a documented recipe. The AI engineer's trained intuitions are distributed across billions of model parameters. Trade secret law was not designed for either. It is being applied to both.

THE FRAME CALLBACK

Post 1: You signed it on day one. You didn't read it. It follows you forever. The knowledge in your head is not yours.

Post 2 adds the trade secret principle:

Post 2 — The Trade Secret

The NDA creates the trade secret. The trade secret enforces the NDA.

The three requirements that were supposed to limit trade secret protection have collapsed into one instrument. The law that was designed to protect the Coca-Cola formula now protects the general knowledge any experienced professional carries in their head. And the DTSA made that protection nationally enforceable — crossing state lines that California's non-compete ban cannot cross.

Next — Post 3 of 6

The Inevitable Disclosure Doctrine. The most aggressive extension of the Locked Mind architecture — and the one that requires no proof of wrongdoing. A former employer can obtain a court injunction blocking you from starting a new job — without proving you took anything, without proving you disclosed anything — simply by convincing a judge that you cannot possibly perform your new role without inevitably using your former employer's trade secrets. PepsiCo v. Redmond. The injunction without evidence. The career blocked by a theory.

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FSA Certified Node

Primary sources: Defend Trade Secrets Act (2016) — public record. Uniform Trade Secrets Act — public record. Waymo LLC v. Uber Technologies Inc. (ND Cal. 2018) — public record. Apple Inc. v. Rivos Inc. (ND Cal. 2022) — public record. PepsiCo Inc. v. Redmond, 54 F.3d 1262 (7th Cir. 1995) — public record. Hrdy, C. and Seaman, C., Yale Law Journal 133:669 (2024) — public record. All sources public record.

Human-AI Collaboration

This post was developed through an explicit human-AI collaborative process as part of the Forensic System Architecture (FSA) methodology.

Randy Gipe · Claude / Anthropic · 2026

Trium Publishing House Limited · The Locked Mind Series · Post 2 of 6 · thegipster.blogspot.com

The Locked Mind — Post 1: The Contract

The Locked Mind — FSA Human Capital Architecture Series · Post 1 of 6

What follows has never appeared in any employment law curriculum, labor economics analysis, or corporate governance history.

The world was reading an employment contract. FSA is reading the architecture that converted what a worker knows — and thinks, and can do — into corporate property that follows them out the door, across state lines, and into the next decade of their working life.

THE FIRST DAY

Monday morning. New job. HR hands you a stack of documents — benefits enrollment, direct deposit authorization, emergency contact form, tax withholding, the employee handbook, and somewhere in the middle: a confidentiality agreement, a non-compete clause, an intellectual property assignment, and a non-solicitation covenant.

You are asked to sign everything before lunch. Your new manager is waiting. Your new colleagues are expecting you. The offer letter was accepted three weeks ago. The moving boxes are unpacked. You sign.

You did not negotiate. You did not read every clause. You did not consult an attorney. Almost nobody does — because the leverage to negotiate was at the offer stage, before you gave notice at your last job, before you relocated, before you became financially dependent on the new salary starting this week. By Monday morning the leverage is gone. The contract is the price of entry. You sign because the alternative is inconceivable.

FSA maps what you signed.

The employment contract is not a negotiated agreement between equal parties.

It is a boilerplate instrument of property transfer — signed at the moment of maximum worker vulnerability, before the first hour of work, converting the knowledge in your head into corporate assets that the employer can pursue across state lines for years after you leave. You signed it on day one. You didn't read it. It follows you forever.

THE FOUR INSTRUMENTS — WHAT THE CONTRACT ACTUALLY CONTAINS

FSA — The Employment Contract · Four Instruments of Cognitive Enclosure

Instrument 1 — The Non-Disclosure Agreement

The NDA prohibits the employee from disclosing or using "confidential information" learned during employment. The definition of confidential information is typically broad — covering not just documented trade secrets but anything the employer designates as confidential, any information not publicly available, and in many agreements any information "imparted in confidence" regardless of whether it was formally marked. A well-drafted NDA covers general industry knowledge, strategic frameworks, customer patterns, and analytical methodologies — not just specific formulas or code. The Yale Law Journal (2024) documented that many NDAs, read closely, function as perpetual non-competes: they have no time limit, no geographic limit, and no subject-matter limit. The information they cover includes everything the employee learned on the job. The employee cannot practice their profession without using that information. The NDA is the chain on the lightbulb.

Instrument 2 — The Non-Compete Clause

The non-compete prohibits the employee from working for a competitor, starting a competing business, or in some agreements working in the same industry or role — for a defined period (typically 6–24 months) within a defined geography (sometimes nationwide). Approximately 30 million American workers — roughly one in five — are currently subject to non-compete agreements. They are not limited to senior executives with genuine access to trade secrets: they cover sandwich shop employees, hairdressers, yoga instructors, and security guards whose employers have required them as standard boilerplate. The non-compete is the most direct "closed door" in the archive: it prohibits the worker from using what they know, regardless of whether any specific secret is disclosed.

Instrument 3 — The IP Assignment

The intellectual property assignment clause transfers ownership of inventions, creative works, and innovations developed during employment — and in many agreements during the employee's own time using their own resources — to the employer. The scope is typically broad: any invention "related to the company's business or research" conceived "during the term of employment." An engineer who develops a novel approach to a problem on a weekend — using their own laptop, with no company resources — may have signed away that invention before they conceived it. The Patent Ledger documented what happens to inventions after they are assigned. The IP assignment is where the assignment begins.

Instrument 4 — The Non-Solicitation Covenant

The non-solicitation clause prohibits the employee from recruiting former colleagues or contacting former clients for a defined period after departure. The client non-solicit converts customer relationships built through the employee's own effort and expertise into corporate property. A salesperson who spent five years building a relationship with a client — meeting them for lunch, understanding their needs, earning their trust — cannot take that relationship to a new employer. The relationship was built by the employee. The contract says it belongs to the company. Together the four instruments — NDA, non-compete, IP assignment, non-solicit — cover the complete cognitive and relational output of a worker's professional life. What they know. Where they can work. What they invent. Who they can call. The employment contract is not a labor agreement. It is a property transfer instrument that runs in both directions — but only one of them benefits the employer.

THE BOILERPLATE ARCHITECTURE — WHY NEGOTIATION DOESN'T HAPPEN

FSA — The Boilerplate Architecture · Why The Contract Is Never Negotiated

Approximately 95% of workers who have non-compete agreements also have NDAs. The same bundle of instruments appears across industries, compensation levels, and job functions — from the Fortune 500 software engineer to the fast food franchise employee. They appear as boilerplate because they are boilerplate: standard form contracts drafted by corporate counsel to maximum employer advantage, presented as non-negotiable conditions of employment, and signed at the moment when the worker's bargaining position is at its absolute minimum.

The leverage asymmetry is architectural. Before the offer: the employer wants you, you have competing offers, negotiation is possible. After the offer is accepted: you have given notice at your previous job, you have made relocation or lifestyle commitments, your new colleagues are expecting you Monday. The non-compete is presented on day one — not at the offer stage — specifically because the worker cannot walk away at day one without catastrophic personal and financial disruption. The timing is not accidental. It is the mechanism.

The Closed Door series documented professional licensing as a market barrier — the bar exam, the medical license, the CPA certification. The Locked Mind maps the Closed Door applied to the worker's own cognition. The employer does not need a licensing board. It uses the employment contract — signed before the worker has earned a dollar — to claim ownership of everything the worker will produce, know, and become during their employment. And for years afterward.

THE SCALE — HOW MANY WORKERS THE ARCHITECTURE COVERS

FSA — The Locked Mind · Scale Profile · 2026

Workers Under Non-Compete

~30M

approximately 1 in 5 US workers

Wage Suppression Estimate

3–14%

earnings increase if banned nationally

Patent Drop Under Stricter Rules

16–19%

citation-weighted patenting — NBER

30 million workers constrained. 3–14% wage suppression. 16–19% patenting decline. The architecture that claims to protect innovation produces less of it — and transfers the wage premium that mobility would generate from workers to employers who hold the non-compete paper.

THE CROSS-SERIES CONNECTIONS

FSA — The Locked Mind · Archive Connections

The Closed Door: Professional licensing creates the market barrier at the profession level — the bar exam, the medical license, the CPA certification. The employment contract creates the market barrier at the individual level — the NDA, the non-compete, the non-solicit. Both systems restrict entry. Both are administered by incumbents. The Closed Door keeps competitors out of the profession. The Locked Mind keeps employees out of the market. Together they form a two-layer enclosure of human capital.

The Patent Ledger: The IP assignment clause is where the Patent Ledger begins for corporate inventions. The Bayh-Dole Act converted public research into private patents. The IP assignment converts employee cognition into corporate patents before the employee has conceived the invention. The chain from mind to corporate portfolio runs through the employment contract signed on day one.

The Invisible Standard: The Invisible Standard documented mandatory rules sold back to the people required to follow them. The Locked Mind maps mandatory contracts signed before employment begins — boilerplate that was never negotiated, never explained, and that the worker must now comply with under penalty of litigation. The standard is invisible. The contract is unread. The compliance is mandatory in both cases.

⚡ FSA Live Node — The FTC Ban That Wasn't · 2024–2026

In April 2024 the Federal Trade Commission voted 3-2 to ban non-compete agreements for virtually all workers — the first federal action against the practice in the agency's history. The rule was projected to affect approximately 30 million workers and raise average earnings by an estimated $300–500 billion over ten years. It was set to take effect in September 2024.

A federal district court in Texas struck down the rule in August 2024 — finding the FTC had exceeded its statutory authority. The FTC appealed. In 2025 the new FTC leadership under the Trump administration dropped the appeal and formally withdrew the rule. The nationwide non-compete ban was struck down before it took effect — and the agency that struck it is no longer pursuing it. The state-by-state patchwork remains: full bans in California, Minnesota, North Dakota, Oklahoma, and Wyoming. Reasonableness tests in most others. No federal floor.

The most significant federal action against non-compete agreements in American history was struck down before a single worker benefited. The architecture absorbed the counter-mechanism before it activated. The contracts are still being signed. Monday morning. Before lunch. The leverage is gone.

THE FRAME

The employment contract is the most widely signed property transfer instrument in American commerce. More people have signed a non-compete agreement than have ever bought a house, signed a mortgage, or executed a will. It is signed at the moment of maximum vulnerability. It is presented as boilerplate. It is almost never explained. And it converts the most personal property a worker possesses — what they know, what they can do, who they know — into corporate assets that outlast the employment relationship by years.

The series maps the full architecture: the contract, the trade secret law that enforces it, the Inevitable Disclosure Doctrine that extends it beyond the contract itself, the state variation that determines where the chains hold — and where they don't.

Post 1 — The Contract

You signed it on day one. You didn't read it. It follows you forever.

The knowledge in your head is not yours. The relationships you built are not yours. The inventions you conceived are not yours. The employment contract is not a labor agreement. It is a property transfer instrument — signed at the moment of maximum vulnerability, before you earned your first dollar, covering everything you will know and become. And the federal ban that could have changed this was struck down before a single worker benefited.

Next — Post 2 of 6

The Trade Secret. What makes knowledge legally protectable — and how the definition has expanded far beyond its original scope. The Defend Trade Secrets Act (2016). The three requirements that are supposed to limit protection — secrecy, economic value, reasonable efforts — and how "reasonable efforts" has collapsed into a single instrument: the NDA you signed on day one. The law that was supposed to protect genuine secrets is protecting everything. Including what you already knew before you walked in the door.

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FSA Certified Node

Primary sources: FTC non-compete rule (April 2024) — Federal Register, public record. Ryan LLC v. FTC, ND Texas (August 2024) — public record. FTC rule withdrawal (2025) — public record. Hrdy, C. and Seaman, C., "Beyond Trade Secrecy," Yale Law Journal 133:669 (2024) — public record. Johnson, Lipsitz & Pei, NBER Working Paper 31487 (2023, revised 2024) — public record. Defend Trade Secrets Act (2016) — public record. All sources public record.

Human-AI Collaboration

This post was developed through an explicit human-AI collaborative process as part of the Forensic System Architecture (FSA) methodology.

Randy Gipe 珞 · Claude / Anthropic · 2026

Trium Publishing House Limited · The Locked Mind Series · Post 1 of 6 · thegipster.blogspot.com