Disclose in a sentence as a verb

"So just by signing an NDA, I'm not obligated to disclose information to the court?

---Author here---I should disclose that I actually work for Microsoft, and still chose the hard way. **** the police!

I won't disclose the amount for now because I want to know what people think this would be worth, but eventually it will be disclosed.

If you want to keep information private, fine, make it a criminal offense for your people to disclose that information to news sources.

I no longer have to legally disclose it, but when I did I always did so with a letter explaining some of the circumstances and how deeply it had affected my life.

An applicant and his patent attorney must disclose any "material" prior art of which they're aware, but the applicant need not do any kind of literature search.

Either disclose the vulnerability immediately to get recognition, hoping it is public enough they'll be ashamed of going after you, or or sell and profit from it.

We do not disclose user information to government agencies without a court order, subpoena or formal legal process, nor do we provide any government agency with access to our servers.

I regret that I am not at liberty to disclose most specific results, but gradual engagement is really tricky to pull off well, and has often roundly failed compared to the traditional get-their-email-first signup screen.

"According to the sample NSL from the article you linked:"We are not directing that you provide, and you should not provide, information pursuant to this letter that would disclose the content of any electronic communication.

California does not recognize the "inevitable disclosure" doctrine by which a former employee can be enjoined from taking a position on grounds that it will be "inevitable" that he would need to disclose important trade secrets in order to perform his duties.

When companies offer stock or other securities to purchasers, the broad rule is that "you can offer anything you want, even something junky, so long as you disclose all material elements associated with the offering such that a reasonable investor can make an informed decision in deciding to purchase it.

The ability, or even the inventor's desire, to keep innovation secret and undisclosed has severely contracted and, in a sense, much of what is innovative in software is an open book, with a whole universe of developers drawing from the same or similar sources and deriving very similar outcomes without reference to one another's work.

They are supposed to take things that would otherwise remain secret and get inventors to disclose this secret know-how so that it can be absorbed into an ever-broadening public pool of knowledge for society's benefit and, as a trade-off, give the inventor a limited monopoly barring all others from using the invention for a limited time even if those others developed it entirely independently of the efforts of the inventor.

Disclose definitions

verb

make known to the public information that was previously known only to a few people or that was meant to be kept a secret; "The auction house would not disclose the price at which the van Gogh had sold"; "The actress won't reveal how old she is"; "bring out the truth"; "he broke the news to her"; "unwrap the evidence in the murder case"

verb

disclose to view as by removing a cover; "The curtain rose to disclose a stunning set"

See also: expose