Legal Question in Employment Law in California
I had a contract with a company and the contract specifically states the term of the contract as being from one date to another. It also has a non-disclosure agreement that goes as follows: "You agree to maintain the confidentiality of all confidential information, including but not limited to financial information and sources of information, acquired during your employment hereunder, and to preserve such information for the exclusive benefit of the Company. In the event of any breach or potential breach of these confidentiality provisions, the Company shall be entitled, in addition to any other remedies that it may have at law or in equity, to injunctive relief or an order of specific performance."
Does that non-disclosure agreement stand forever, or just for the duration of the contract?
1 Answer from Attorneys
If it is true confidential information that cannot be acquired from any other source, it is the property of the company and cannot be disclosed by you at any time.
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