Certified Information Privacy Technologist (CIPT) v1.0

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Exam contains 287 questions

Which of the following is considered a records management best practice?

  • A. Archiving expired data records and files.
  • B. Storing decryption keys with their associated backup systems.
  • C. Implementing consistent handling practices across all record types.
  • D. Using classification to determine access rules and retention policy.


Answer : D

Reference:
https://www.archive-vault.co.uk/best-practice-for-records-management

Which of the following provides a mechanism that allows an end-user to use a single sign-on (SSO) for multiple services?

  • A. The Open ID Federation.
  • B. PCI Data Security Standards Council
  • C. International Organization for Standardization.
  • D. Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act.


Answer : A

A user who owns a resource wants to give other individuals access to the resource. What control would apply?

  • A. Mandatory access control.
  • B. Role-based access controls.
  • C. Discretionary access control.
  • D. Context of authority controls.


Answer : B

Reference:
https://docs.microsoft.com/bs-latn-ba/azure/role-based-access-control/overview

What is the potential advantage of homomorphic encryption?

  • A. Encrypted information can be analyzed without decrypting it first.
  • B. Ciphertext size decreases as the security level increases.
  • C. It allows greater security and faster processing times.
  • D. It makes data impenetrable to attacks.


Answer : C

Reference:
https://www.sciencedirect.com/topics/computer-science/homomorphic-encryption

What has been found to undermine the public key infrastructure system?

  • A. Man-in-the-middle attacks.
  • B. Inability to track abandoned keys.
  • C. Disreputable certificate authorities.
  • D. Browsers missing a copy of the certificate authority's public key.


Answer : D

SCENARIO -
Wesley Energy has finally made its move, acquiring the venerable oil and gas exploration firm Lancelot from its long-time owner David Wilson. As a member of the transition team, you have come to realize that Wilson's quirky nature affected even Lancelot's data practices, which are maddeningly inconsistent. `The old man hired and fired IT people like he was changing his necktie,` one of Wilson's seasoned lieutenants tells you, as you identify the traces of initiatives left half complete.
For instance, while some proprietary data and personal information on clients and employees is encrypted, other sensitive information, including health information from surveillance testing of employees for toxic exposures, remains unencrypted, particularly when included within longer records with less-sensitive data. You also find that data is scattered across applications, servers and facilities in a manner that at first glance seems almost random.
Among your preliminary findings of the condition of data at Lancelot are the following:
✑ Cloud technology is supplied by vendors around the world, including firms that you have not heard of. You are told by a former Lancelot employee that these vendors operate with divergent security requirements and protocols.
✑ The company's proprietary recovery process for shale oil is stored on servers among a variety of less-sensitive information that can be accessed not only by scientists, but by personnel of all types at most company locations.
✑ DES is the strongest encryption algorithm currently used for any file.
✑ Several company facilities lack physical security controls, beyond visitor check-in, which familiar vendors often bypass.
✑ Fixing all of this will take work, but first you need to grasp the scope of the mess and formulate a plan of action to address it.
Which is true regarding the type of encryption Lancelot uses?

  • A. It employs the data scrambling technique known as obfuscation.
  • B. Its decryption key is derived from its encryption key.
  • C. It uses a single key for encryption and decryption.
  • D. It is a data masking methodology.


Answer : C

SCENARIO -
Wesley Energy has finally made its move, acquiring the venerable oil and gas exploration firm Lancelot from its long-time owner David Wilson. As a member of the transition team, you have come to realize that Wilson's quirky nature affected even Lancelot's data practices, which are maddeningly inconsistent. `The old man hired and fired IT people like he was changing his necktie,` one of Wilson's seasoned lieutenants tells you, as you identify the traces of initiatives left half complete.
For instance, while some proprietary data and personal information on clients and employees is encrypted, other sensitive information, including health information from surveillance testing of employees for toxic exposures, remains unencrypted, particularly when included within longer records with less-sensitive data. You also find that data is scattered across applications, servers and facilities in a manner that at first glance seems almost random.
Among your preliminary findings of the condition of data at Lancelot are the following:
✑ Cloud technology is supplied by vendors around the world, including firms that you have not heard of. You are told by a former Lancelot employee that these vendors operate with divergent security requirements and protocols.
✑ The company's proprietary recovery process for shale oil is stored on servers among a variety of less-sensitive information that can be accessed not only by scientists, but by personnel of all types at most company locations.
✑ DES is the strongest encryption algorithm currently used for any file.
✑ Several company facilities lack physical security controls, beyond visitor check-in, which familiar vendors often bypass.
✑ Fixing all of this will take work, but first you need to grasp the scope of the mess and formulate a plan of action to address it.
Which procedure should be employed to identify the types and locations of data held by Wesley Energy?

  • A. Privacy audit.
  • B. Log collection
  • C. Data inventory.
  • D. Data classification.


Answer : C

A credit card with the last few numbers visible is an example of what?

  • A. Masking data
  • B. Synthetic data
  • C. Sighting controls.
  • D. Partial encryption


Answer : A

Reference:
https://money.stackexchange.com/questions/98951/credit-card-number-masking-good-practices-rules-law-regulations

What is an example of a just-in-time notice?

  • A. A warning that a website may be unsafe.
  • B. A full organizational privacy notice publicly available on a website
  • C. A credit card company calling a user to verify a purchase before it is authorized
  • D. Privacy information given to a user when he attempts to comment on an online article.


Answer : D

Reference:
https://www.clarip.com/data-privacy/just-time-notices/

A vendor has been collecting data under an old contract, not aligned with the practices of the organization.
Which is the preferred response?

  • A. Destroy the data
  • B. Update the contract to bring the vendor into alignment.
  • C. Continue the terms of the existing contract until it expires.
  • D. Terminate the contract and begin a vendor selection process.


Answer : B

SCENARIO -
It should be the most secure location housing data in all of Europe, if not the world. The Global Finance Data Collective (GFDC) stores financial information and other types of client data from large banks, insurance companies, multinational corporations and governmental agencies. After a long climb on a mountain road that leads only to the facility, you arrive at the security booth. Your credentials are checked and checked again by the guard to visually verify that you are the person pictured on your passport and national identification card. You are led down a long corridor with server rooms on each side, secured by combination locks built into the doors. You climb a flight of stairs and are led into an office that is lighted brilliantly by skylights where the GFDC Director of Security, Dr. Monique
Batch, greets you. On the far wall you notice a bank of video screens showing different rooms in the facility. At the far end, several screens show different sections of the road up the mountain
Dr. Batch explains once again your mission. As a data security auditor and consultant, it is a dream assignment: The GFDC does not want simply adequate controls, but the best and most effective security that current technologies allow.
`We were hacked twice last year,` Dr. Batch says, `and although only a small number of records were stolen, the bad press impacted our business. Our clients count on us to provide security that is nothing short of impenetrable and to do so quietly. We hope to never make the news again.` She notes that it is also essential that the facility is in compliance with all relevant security regulations and standards.
You have been asked to verify compliance as well as to evaluate all current security controls and security measures, including data encryption methods, authentication controls and the safest methods for transferring data into and out of the facility. As you prepare to begin your analysis, you find yourself considering an intriguing question: Can these people be sure that I am who I say I am?
You are shown to the office made available to you and are provided with system login information, including the name of the wireless network and a wireless key.
Still pondering, you attempt to pull up the facility's wireless network, but no networks appear in the wireless list. When you search for the wireless network by name, however it is readily found.
Why would you recommend that GFC use record encryption rather than disk, file or table encryption?

  • A. Record encryption is asymmetric, a stronger control measure.
  • B. Record encryption is granular, limiting the damage of potential breaches.
  • C. Record encryption involves tag masking, so its metadata cannot be decrypted
  • D. Record encryption allows for encryption of personal data only.


Answer : B

SCENARIO -
It should be the most secure location housing data in all of Europe, if not the world. The Global Finance Data Collective (GFDC) stores financial information and other types of client data from large banks, insurance companies, multinational corporations and governmental agencies. After a long climb on a mountain road that leads only to the facility, you arrive at the security booth. Your credentials are checked and checked again by the guard to visually verify that you are the person pictured on your passport and national identification card. You are led down a long corridor with server rooms on each side, secured by combination locks built into the doors. You climb a flight of stairs and are led into an office that is lighted brilliantly by skylights where the GFDC Director of Security, Dr. Monique
Batch, greets you. On the far wall you notice a bank of video screens showing different rooms in the facility. At the far end, several screens show different sections of the road up the mountain
Dr. Batch explains once again your mission. As a data security auditor and consultant, it is a dream assignment: The GFDC does not want simply adequate controls, but the best and most effective security that current technologies allow.
`We were hacked twice last year,` Dr. Batch says, `and although only a small number of records were stolen, the bad press impacted our business. Our clients count on us to provide security that is nothing short of impenetrable and to do so quietly. We hope to never make the news again.` She notes that it is also essential that the facility is in compliance with all relevant security regulations and standards.
You have been asked to verify compliance as well as to evaluate all current security controls and security measures, including data encryption methods, authentication controls and the safest methods for transferring data into and out of the facility. As you prepare to begin your analysis, you find yourself considering an intriguing question: Can these people be sure that I am who I say I am?
You are shown to the office made available to you and are provided with system login information, including the name of the wireless network and a wireless key.
Still pondering, you attempt to pull up the facility's wireless network, but no networks appear in the wireless list. When you search for the wireless network by name, however it is readily found.
What measures can protect client information stored at GFDC?

  • A. De-linking of data into client-specific packets.
  • B. Cloud-based applications.
  • C. Server-side controls.
  • D. Data pruning


Answer : A

SCENARIO -
It should be the most secure location housing data in all of Europe, if not the world. The Global Finance Data Collective (GFDC) stores financial information and other types of client data from large banks, insurance companies, multinational corporations and governmental agencies. After a long climb on a mountain road that leads only to the facility, you arrive at the security booth. Your credentials are checked and checked again by the guard to visually verify that you are the person pictured on your passport and national identification card. You are led down a long corridor with server rooms on each side, secured by combination locks built into the doors. You climb a flight of stairs and are led into an office that is lighted brilliantly by skylights where the GFDC Director of Security, Dr. Monique
Batch, greets you. On the far wall you notice a bank of video screens showing different rooms in the facility. At the far end, several screens show different sections of the road up the mountain
Dr. Batch explains once again your mission. As a data security auditor and consultant, it is a dream assignment: The GFDC does not want simply adequate controls, but the best and most effective security that current technologies allow.
`We were hacked twice last year,` Dr. Batch says, `and although only a small number of records were stolen, the bad press impacted our business. Our clients count on us to provide security that is nothing short of impenetrable and to do so quietly. We hope to never make the news again.` She notes that it is also essential that the facility is in compliance with all relevant security regulations and standards.
You have been asked to verify compliance as well as to evaluate all current security controls and security measures, including data encryption methods, authentication controls and the safest methods for transferring data into and out of the facility. As you prepare to begin your analysis, you find yourself considering an intriguing question: Can these people be sure that I am who I say I am?
You are shown to the office made available to you and are provided with system login information, including the name of the wireless network and a wireless key.
Still pondering, you attempt to pull up the facility's wireless network, but no networks appear in the wireless list. When you search for the wireless network by name, however it is readily found.
What type of wireless network does GFDC seem to employ?

  • A. A hidden network.
  • B. A reluctant network.
  • C. A user verified network.
  • D. A wireless mesh network.


Answer : A

Reference:
https://help.gnome.org/users/gnome-help/stable/net-wireless-hidden.html.en

What must be used in conjunction with disk encryption?

  • A. Increased CPU speed.
  • B. A strong password.
  • C. A digital signature.
  • D. Export controls.


Answer : C

Which is NOT a way to validate a person's identity?

  • A. Swiping a smartcard into an electronic reader.
  • B. Using a program that creates random passwords.
  • C. Answering a question about "something you knowג€.
  • D. Selecting a picture and tracing a unique pattern on it


Answer : B

Page:    1 / 19   
Exam contains 287 questions

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