Tsung-Hsuan Tsou serves as a Deputy Director General in the Science & Technology Law Institute of the Institute for Information Industry. She is responsible for the research of various countries' intellectual property management, regulation and policy research. And assists the judiciary to establish the operating mechanism and regulation of Blockchain-Applied Judicial Alliance for Digital Era (b-JADE).
Tsung-Hsuan Tsou is a certified ISO 27007 lead aduitor, the drafter of the first guideline about trade secret protection in Taiwan in 2016 and the drafter of the first trade secret management system regulation in Taiwan in 2023. She is skilled at the at the layout and disclosure of intellectual property, technical protection of confidential information and preservation of digital data, and possesses over 15-year experience in assisting enterprises to operate their intellectual property resource effectively. Currently, she is in charge of the project of the Taiwan Intellectual Property Management System (TIPS), promoting R&D IP management strategies under the Industrial Innovation Act, developing corporate governance IP evaluation standards, and establishing confidential R&D data protection mechanisms.
She is also the host or co-host of projects of "Promoting Enterprises to Establish Intellectual Property Management System Plan", "Assisting Enterprises to Develop International Brands and Promoting Intellectual Property Management Counseling", "Industrial Intellectual Property Innovation Strategy Analysis and Environment Construction and Layout Plan Intellectual Property Value Creation", "Strengthening Enterprise Intellectual Property Management Plan", "Intellectual Property Rooting Plan" from Ministry of Economic Affairs, and projects from National Science and Technology Council, Ministry of Health and Welfare, Ministry of Culture, Ministry of Agriculture, Ministry of Justice and Taiwan Intellectual Property Office.
Trade secrets are key to maintaining a company's competitive advantage. Most people assume that implementing cybersecurity controls is enough to meet the requirements of reasonable measures for trade secrets. However, the purpose of classification in information security differs from that of trade secret protection. As a result, existing cybersecurity practices may not be sufficient to demonstrate that a company has implemented adequate control measures to protect its trade secrets.
CYBERSEC 2025 uses cookies to provide you with the best user experience possible. By continuing to use this site, you agree to the terms in our Privacy Policy 。