A purchaser of assets in bankruptcy must be careful to identify which specific intangible assets like contracts and agreements are important, as disclaiming successor liability may inadvertently deny valuable assets. A case found that a purchaser was not entitled to enforce non-compete or non-disclosure agreements it had not explicitly acquired, even after a later attempted assignment, because the original debtor no longer had legitimate business interests in the agreements after the sale. The lesson is for purchasers to carefully specify important intangible assets in the asset purchase agreement to ensure they are obtained.