Following a fire in a data center, an executive is concerned about the amount of data that must be reentered. Which of the following describes the executive's concern?
D. RPO
RTO Represents the maximum acceptable amount of time it should take to restore a system or service after a disruption. It is concerned with how quickly systems can be brought back online, not the amount of data lost.
RPO (Recovery Point Objective): Refers to the maximum acceptable amount of data loss measured in time. It defines the point in time to which data must be recovered after a disruption. If the data center experiences a fire, RPO helps determine how much data might need to be reentered based on how frequently data backups are made.
The recovery time objective (RTO) is the targeted duration of time between the event of failure and the point where operations resume. A recovery point objective (RPO) is the maximum length of time permitted that data can be restored from, which may or may not mean data loss.
Thats RTO, answer A
D. RPO (Recovery Point Objective)
The executive's concern about the amount of data that must be reentered aligns with the concept of Recovery Point Objective (RPO). RPO defines the acceptable amount of data loss in the event of a disaster or disruption. It represents the point in time to which data must be restored after an outage.
In this context, the executive is concerned about how much data might be lost and, consequently, how much needs to be reentered after the fire in the data center.
Therefore, the correct answer is D. RPO.
RTO measures the quantity of time that passes during an incident before reaching the business continuity plan’s (BCP) threshold of acceptability. The RTO kicks in when the incident begins and provides guidance for how quickly a particular issue must be solved.
RPO is a point in time that data must be recoverable: so the difference between that and the point at which the fire started will need to be done manually.
A recovery point objective (RPO) is the maximum length of time permitted that data can be restored from, which may or may not mean data loss. It is the age of the files or data in backup storage required to resume normal operations if a computer system or network failure occurs.
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