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CIMA Exam CIMAPRA19-P03-1 Topic 1 Question 66 Discussion

Actual exam question for CIMA's CIMAPRA19-P03-1 exam
Question #: 66
Topic #: 1
[All CIMAPRA19-P03-1 Questions]

JNH is a major corporation that stores its customer database in the Cloud JNH has suffered a data breach that has led to customer credit card details being made available for sale on the internet JNH's Head of Security wishes to analyse network traffic at the cloud-based server in order to gain a better understanding of the manner in which the data was intercepted, but has been refused access.

Which of the following is the most likely explanation for the third-party owner's refusal to assist JNH's Head of Security?

Show Suggested Answer Hide Answer
Suggested Answer: C, D, F

Contribute your Thoughts:

Felix
27 days ago
The cloud provider is probably like 'we don't see any data breaches here, just a bunch of fluffy clouds.'
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Trevor
5 days ago
A) The Cloud is impregnable and so the breach must have been elsewhere
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Sheridan
29 days ago
Maybe the cloud provider is just 'clouding' the issue. Get it? Clouding? *chuckles*
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Lyda
22 hours ago
D) Admitting the breach would harm the reputation of the Cloud
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Catarina
6 days ago
C) The server will contain data belonging to other clients
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Buddy
14 days ago
B) The network data will not have been stored by the server's owner
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Eveline
15 days ago
A) The Cloud is impregnable and so the breach must have been elsewhere
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Marvel
2 months ago
I bet the cloud provider is like 'what happens in the cloud, stays in the cloud.' Not very helpful, is it?
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Jennie
16 days ago
C) The server will contain data belonging to other clients
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Albert
1 months ago
B) The network data will not have been stored by the server's owner
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Leonardo
1 months ago
A) The Cloud is impregnable and so the breach must have been elsewhere
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Orville
2 months ago
D is the answer. The cloud provider doesn't want to admit they had a security breach and tarnish their reputation.
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Oretha
2 months ago
Option C seems the most likely. The server probably contains data from other clients, and the owner wouldn't want to compromise their privacy.
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Twanna
18 days ago
D) Admitting the breach would harm the reputation of the Cloud
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Doug
25 days ago
C) The server will contain data belonging to other clients
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Shawn
1 months ago
B) The network data will not have been stored by the server's owner
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Pamella
2 months ago
A) The Cloud is impregnable and so the breach must have been elsewhere
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Carisa
2 months ago
But what about option D? Could it be that admitting the breach would harm the reputation of the Cloud?
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Lynelle
3 months ago
That makes sense. They wouldn't want to risk exposing other clients' data.
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Ashanti
3 months ago
I think the server owner refused access because the data may belong to other clients.
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