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I have this insurance book with their products in it, I dont work for their company anymore, they did me wrong, shoud I sale the insurance product book to a rival or someone?

2007-11-19 09:49:09 · 5 answers · asked by J1M 2 in Business & Finance Insurance

5 answers

Unless you signed a statement that you wouldn't, then why not?
However if the competetor was truely needing the info to be competetive, then they could just act like an interested customer and get the info anyway.

Good luck

Oh, if it feels wrong, then it probably is

2007-11-19 09:54:20 · answer #1 · answered by in COGNITO * 4 · 1 1

The question behind the question is....

Do you feel it would be ethical to profit off a company that you don't want anything to do with? Frankly, my name is worth more then a couple of bucks.

Also, not too surprising that a company that charges for their product book did you wrong. That sounds pretty shady. If the company had confidence in their product they wouldn't charge for sales materials.

2007-11-19 19:28:00 · answer #2 · answered by Dimples_in_NJ 3 · 1 0

I don't think anyone is going to want it, honestly. But if you do, and you signed a confidentiality agreement - or even if you didn't - be prepared to face legal charges of theft of intellectual property.

2007-11-19 20:56:54 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous 7 · 0 0

planning to get sued, are you?

a secretary at Coca-Cola tried that. She's in jail now. So are the two people she got to help her.

It is called theft of trade secrets and is a felony.

2007-11-19 17:57:48 · answer #4 · answered by Spock (rhp) 7 · 0 2

Not ethical. man up and give the book back.

2007-11-19 18:40:25 · answer #5 · answered by kittie_in_ca 3 · 0 1

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