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| | Ask HN: How to disclose something without disclosing it? | | 48 points by staticautomatic on July 15, 2018 | hide | past | favorite | 59 comments | | A while back I came across an interesting problem that I've been thinking about off and on. Let's say I am thinking about taking a job working for a large company, but in some relatively dangerous part of world. I don't think I would take the job unless, among other things, I knew that the employer had kidnap and ransom insurance for its employees. However, some K&R policies prohibit the employer from telling the employee that the coverage exists. Is it possible for the employer to prove that they have the insurance without telling the prospective employee? |
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Mathematically no. But this isn't a mathematical question, it's a legal one: "some K&R policies prohibit".
You need to nitpick the legal agreement and figure out the loopholes.
Your employer will have to assist you with that, since you have no access to the agreement.
For example as part of the employment agreement you write: "Company shall expend whatever resources are necessary to recover employee in case of kidnap, etc, etc". There is no mention of insurance, just that the company will get you back. How they do it is their problem. (Obviously you're going to need a lawyer to help you write it.)