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This is absolutely untrue. Trade secrets are hugely important to many businesses, hence the widespread existence of corporate espionage. It is not unheard of for a particular manufacturing process (or part thereof) to have a commercial value of hundreds of millions of dollars; the example that springs to mind is Dupont vs Kolon.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DuPont_v._Kolon_Industries

If a junior employee on low wages has access to trade secrets then you're doing something terribly wrong, but it is entirely normal for e.g. industrial chemists, food technologists and manufacturing engineers to know extremely valuable secrets about the companies they work for. It is similarly normal for them to be offered extremely generous severance packages tied to a strict NDA.

The software industry is far from unique in the use of (largely legitimate) NDAs and non-competes for senior employees with extensive access to proprietary knowledge. Conneticut's concerns are about non-compete clauses being used illegitimately as a means of reducing churn for junior employees, which is a very different matter.



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