<Li> it can also be used against a company that finds itself with trade secrets belonging to a competitor . </Li> <P> In United States v. Lange, the EEA was used to protect a victim company that had learned that Lange, a disgruntled former employee, had been offering to sell its secret manufacturing processes to third parties . The company reported Lange to the FBI, and Lange was arrested and subsequently convicted and sentenced to 30 months in prison . The case was successful in large part because the company undertook reasonable measures to keep its information secret, including: </P> <Ol> <Li> physically securing the trade secrets in question </Li> <Li> limiting the distribution of documentation describing the trade secret </Li> <Li> limiting the number of employees with access to the trade secret </Li> <Li> notifying such employees that they were working with confidential information, and placing warnings on trade secret information </Li> <Li> providing vendors with only partial information of the trade secret, so that it could not be replicated </Li> </Ol> <Li> physically securing the trade secrets in question </Li>

Which of the following statements is true of the economic espionage act (eea)