- Thu May 28, 2020 11:48 am
#75758
Could you explain why answer C is wrong? And also describe what your general approach to this question would be? A and C seem like they could both be correct, and I think having a means to attacking this kind of question would help me be able to eliminate one/decide on the correct answer in the future. Thanks so much
Who Ray wrote:Hi there!
In lines 55-59, the author says that injunctions are ineffective "except" for concrete things, but answer choice D says that it is ineffective even for those concrete things. While this might be an effective rhetorical strategy, it would mean that the author is contradicting themselves, and LSAC assumes people do not do that.
Answer choice A is correct because, according to the author, injunctions are the only recourse a corporation has if an employee begins working for a competitor (line 10-15); however, these injunctions are effective only at protecting concrete pieces of corporate property—nothing else. Therefore, the best option a company has is to keep its employees because once they leave the company cannot keep control of their trade secrets.
Cheers,
Who Ray
Could you explain why answer C is wrong? And also describe what your general approach to this question would be? A and C seem like they could both be correct, and I think having a means to attacking this kind of question would help me be able to eliminate one/decide on the correct answer in the future. Thanks so much