更多"What if You’re on the Receiving End"的相关试题:
[单项选择]What if You’re on the Receiving EndFor most employers, the principal concern is the employee who takes trade secrets to a new job -- but what about the employer who unwittingly hires someone who has stolen trade secrets An employer is going to be liable if he knew or he should have known that this employee was (21) with trade secrets. Thus, it’s important to do an entrance interview (22) on trade secrets, ask him outright if he signed a nondisclosure agreement. If so, review it. Show the employee the (23) provisions of the Economic Espionage Act and have him sign a statement (24) that he understand what the potential liability is and he’s not bringing any trade secrets with him.There’s a "very fine line" between hiring an employee for "general knowledge, skills and experience" and hiring an employee to gain (25) to a competitor’s trade secrets. But, if the (26) employer has not specified to the worker what information is secret and what information is not, you will be well insulated if you have the worker sign a one-page form in which he or she agrees not to (27) company policy against disclosing or using the trade secret of former employer.But once an employer is on (28) that an employee is using someone else’s trade secrets, the employer must (29) action: even then, the employer may not be able to avoid liability entirely.Firing an offending employee as soon as the misappropriation is discovered may not (30) the employer of liability, but it goes a long way toward showing a judge or jury that the company limited the damage to the extent that they could.
A. pinpointed
B. confined
C. focused
D. revolved
[单项选择]What Can You Ask When You’re Hiring
Once upon a time, if a job applicant was sitting on the other side of your desk, you (21) ... ask her about her disabilities and what it might take to accommodate her in your company. This was true even if the applicant’s disability was obvious because she was in a wheelchair or using a seeing-eye dog. (22) ... the applicant herself made reference to her disability, the employer was (23) .., in what he could ask.
(24) ... things changed in October 1995. Ten Equal Employment Opportunity Commission revised its guidelines for the American with Disabilities Act (ADA). With the new guidelines in place, it is (25) ... for employers to make inquiries about obvious disabilities or ask questions if the applicant (26) ... she is disabled or will require reasonable accommodation.
The idea behind the new guidelines, called "ADA Enforcement Guidance: Pre-employment Disability-Related Questions a
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