Google is trying to turn its search engine into an employment engine. Job…

2020

Google is trying to turn its search engine into an employment engine. Job hunters will be able to go to Google and see help-wanted listings that its search engine collects across the internet. The results will aim to streamline such listings by eliminating duplicate jobs posted on different sites. Google will also show employer ratings from current and former workers, as well as typical commute times to job locations.
(I) Now a days Google market is not good that’s why Google launched new service.
(II) Google is no more interested in providing other services to its consumer, now Google is focused only on turning its search engine into an employment engine.
(III) Google’s search engine results will aim to well organized employment listings by removing duplicate jobs.
(IV) Google is not interested to show any kind of ratings in its new employment search engine.
Which of the following can be deduced from the given passage?

  1. A.

    Only II and IV

  2. B.

    Only I and III

  3. C.

    Only II and III

  4. D.

    Only III

  5. E.

    None of these

Show answer & explanation

Correct answer: D

Concept

In a deduction (inference) question, a statement can be deduced from a passage only if it is directly stated or logically forced by the passage. Anything that adds new information, over-generalises, or contradicts the text is not a valid deduction, even if it sounds reasonable in the real world.

Applying it to each statement

  • Google's market is not good, that's why it launched the service: the passage gives no reason of a weak market; this is added information, so it is not deducible.

  • Google is no longer interested in other services and is focused only on the employment engine: the passage says Google is trying to turn its search engine into an employment engine and will also show ratings and commute times; it never says other services are dropped, so this over-generalises and is not deducible.

  • The search results aim to well-organise employment listings by removing duplicate jobs: this restates aim to streamline such listings by eliminating duplicate jobs, so it is directly supported and deducible.

  • Google is not interested in showing any kind of ratings: the passage explicitly says Google will also show employer ratings, so this contradicts the text and is not deducible.

Cross-check

Only the third statement survives the test, so the valid deduction is the set that contains exactly that statement: Only III.

Explore the full course: Niacl Ao It Specialist