It is every inventor\u27s nightmare: a valuable idea, stolen, with no legal recourse. Yet that is precisely what happened in Lucent v. Crater, where the Federal Circuit permitted the Federal Government to defeat the inventors\u27 claims using the military and state secrets privilege. In light of the recent upsurge in the Government\u27s invocation of this privilege, it is time to scrutinize more carefully courts\u27 highly deferential response to its use. There is little question that the executive branch must be able to invoke the privilege in order to ensure that national security is not imperiled by public disclosure of information. But courts too often acquiesce in the complete suppression of that information. Unfortunately, in the cont...