Common use of Proprietary Information and Texas Public Information Act Clause in Contracts

Proprietary Information and Texas Public Information Act. All material submitted to the County shall become public property and subject to the Texas Public Information Act upon receipt. If a Vendor does not desire proprietary information in the Bid to be disclosed, each page must be clearly identified and marked proprietary at time of submittal or, more preferably, all proprietary information may be placed in a folder or appendix and be clearly identified and marked as being proprietary. The County will, to the extent allowed by law, endeavor to protect from public disclosure the information that has been identified and marked as proprietary. The final decision as to what information must be disclosed, however, lies with the Texas Attorney General. Failure to clearly identify and mark information as being proprietary as set forth under this provision will result in all unmarked information being deemed non-proprietary and available to the public. For all information that has not been clearly identified and marked as proprietary by the Vendor, the County may choose to place such information on the County’s website and/or a similar public database without obtaining any type of prior consent from the Vendor."

Appears in 2 contracts

Samples: Short Form Agreement, Services Agreements

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Proprietary Information and Texas Public Information Act. All material submitted to the County shall become public property and subject to the Texas Public Information Act upon receipt. If a Vendor does not desire proprietary information in the Bid to be disclosed, each page must be clearly identified and marked proprietary at time of submittal or, more preferably, all proprietary information may be placed in a folder or appendix and be clearly identified and marked as being proprietary. The County will, to the extent allowed by law, endeavor to protect from public disclosure the information that has been identified and marked as proprietary. The final decision as to what information must be disclosed, however, lies with the Texas Attorney General. Failure to clearly identify and mark xxxx information as being proprietary as set forth under this provision will result in all unmarked information being deemed non-proprietary and available to the public. For all information that has not been clearly identified and marked as proprietary by the Vendor, the County may choose to place such information on the County’s website and/or a similar public database without obtaining any type of prior consent from the Vendor."

Appears in 2 contracts

Samples: Short Form Agreement, Short Form Agreement

Proprietary Information and Texas Public Information Act. All material submitted to the County Recipient shall become public property and subject to the Texas Public Information Act upon receipt. If a Vendor Releasor does not desire proprietary information in the Bid to be disclosed, each page must be clearly identified and marked proprietary at time of submittal or, more preferably, all proprietary information may be placed in a folder or appendix and be clearly identified and marked as being proprietary. The County Recipient will, to the extent allowed by law, endeavor to protect from public disclosure the information that has been identified and marked as proprietary. The final decision as to what information must be disclosed, however, lies with the Texas Attorney General. Failure to clearly identify and mark xxxx information as being proprietary as set forth under this provision will result in all unmarked information being deemed non-proprietary and available to the public. For all information that has not been clearly identified and marked as proprietary by the VendorReleasor, the County Recipient may choose to place such information on the CountyRecipient’s website and/or a similar public database without obtaining any type of prior consent from the VendorReleasor."

Appears in 1 contract

Samples: Nondisclosure and Confidentiality Agreement

Proprietary Information and Texas Public Information Act. All material submitted to the Xxxxxxxxxx County EMS shall become public property and subject to the Texas Public Information Act upon receipt. If a Vendor Billing Service Provider does not desire information containing proprietary information in the Bid to be disclosed, each page must be clearly identified and marked proprietary at time of submittal or, more preferably, all proprietary information may be placed in a folder or appendix and be clearly identified and marked as being proprietary. The Xxxxxxxxxx County EMS will, to the extent allowed by law, endeavor to protect from public disclosure the information that has been identified and marked as proprietary. The final decision as to what information must be disclosed, however, lies with the Texas Attorney General. Failure to clearly identify and mark xxxx information as being proprietary as set forth under this provision will result in all unmarked information being deemed non-proprietary and available to the public. For all information that has not been clearly identified and marked as proprietary by the VendorRespondent, the County may choose to place such information on the County’s website and/or a similar public database without obtaining any type of prior consent from the VendorRespondent."

Appears in 1 contract

Samples: Billing and Accounts Receivable Service Agreement

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Proprietary Information and Texas Public Information Act. All material submitted to the Xxxxxxxxxx County EMS shall become public property and subject to the Texas Public Information Act upon receipt. If a Vendor Billing Service Provider does not desire information containing proprietary information in the Bid to be disclosed, each page must be clearly identified and marked proprietary at time of submittal or, more preferably, all proprietary information may be placed in a folder or appendix and be clearly identified and marked as being proprietary. The Xxxxxxxxxx County EMS will, to the extent allowed by law, endeavor to protect from public disclosure the information that has been identified and marked as proprietary. The final decision as to what information must be disclosed, however, lies with the Texas Attorney General. Failure to clearly identify and mark xxxx information as being proprietary as set forth under this provision will result in all unmarked information being deemed non-proprietary and available to the public. For all information that has not been clearly identified and marked as proprietary by the VendorRespondent, the County may choose to place such information on the County’s website and/or a similar public database without obtaining any type of prior consent from the Vendor."such

Appears in 1 contract

Samples: Billing and Accounts Receivable Service Agreement

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