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
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




