Supreme Court rules CFAA is not available in most employment lawsuits involving trade secrets, NDA’s, non-competes and non-solicits

Resolving a long-running split among the lower courts, the Supreme Court has, unfortunately for employers, held that the CFAA (Computer Fraud and Abuse Act) is not available in most lawsuits against current and former employees involving trade secrets, NDA’s, non-competes and non-solicits. The CFAA is a powerful federal law that allows enhanced remedies for companies who are the victim of someone using their computers “without authorization.” It has, in many jurisdictions, been the frequent basis for lawsuits against current and former employees who use computers and the data on computers, such as customer lists, pricing information and other trade secrets or confidential information, to compete against their employers.

Many jurisdictions had held that, as soon as an employee undertakes a disloyal act — such as violating an NDA, non-compete, or common law breach of loyalty — any subsequent use, including access, of their employer’s computers, including data on those computers, is “without authorization.”

The Supreme Court rejected that position and held, instead, that the CFAA only “covers those who obtain information from particular areas in the computer — such as files, folders, or databases — to which their computer access does not extend. It does not cover those who … have improper motives for obtaining information that is otherwise available to them.”

Why would the Supreme Court strip employers of such a valuable tool for protecting their confidential information? Remember the CFAA was only used in such situations when — and because — the employee violated the company’s rights. The majority was concerned that the CFAA also includes criminal penalties. Indeed the case arose as a criminal prosecution. The majority reasoned that permitting the CFAA to cover those whose use was unlawful due to an “improper motive” would result in a “breathtaking” number of criminal cases. A 3-justice dissent disagreed, but until and unless Congress amends the CFAA, the Supreme Court’s decision has stripped employers of a previously valuable tool.

Employers (and employees) involved in or anticipating lawsuits that include CFAA claims should immediately review the Supreme Court’s decision and its impact on their litigation.

Source: Van Buren v. U.S., case no. 19-783 (6/3/2021).

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