Common use of Acknowledgment of Confidentiality Clause in Contracts

Acknowledgment of Confidentiality. Each Party hereby acknowledges that it may be exposed to confidential and proprietary information of the other Party including, without limitation, software and other technical information (including functional and technical specifications, designs, drawings, analysis, research, processes, computer programs, methods, ideas, "know how" and the like), business information (sales and marketing research, materials, plans, accounting and financial information, personnel records and the like) and other information designated as confidential expressly or by the circumstances in which it is provided ("Confidential Information"). Confidential Information does not include (i) information already known or independently developed by the recipient; (ii) information in the public domain through no wrongful act of the recipient, (iii) information received by the recipient from a third party who was free to disclose it, or iv) information or documents which are subject to disclosure under the California Public Records Act.

Appears in 2 contracts

Samples: Service Agreement, Service Agreement

AutoNDA by SimpleDocs

Acknowledgment of Confidentiality. Each Party party hereby acknowledges that it may be exposed to confidential and proprietary information of the other Party party including, without limitation, software and other technical information (including functional and technical specifications, designs, drawings, analysis, research, processes, computer programs, methods, ideas, "know how" and the like), business information (sales and marketing research, materials, plans, accounting and financial information, personnel records and the like) and other information designated as confidential expressly or by the circumstances in which it is provided ("Confidential Information"). Confidential Information does not include (i) information already known or independently developed by the recipient; (ii) information in the public domain through no wrongful act of the recipient, (iii) information received by the recipient from a third party who was free to disclose it, or iv) information or documents which are subject to disclosure under the California Public Records Act.

Appears in 1 contract

Samples: Consulting Agreement

AutoNDA by SimpleDocs
Draft better contracts in just 5 minutes Get the weekly Law Insider newsletter packed with expert videos, webinars, ebooks, and more!