Suggested Answer:A🗳️
The correct answer is "clipping level". This is the point at which a system decides to take some sort of action when an action repeats a preset number of times. That action may be to log the activity, lock a user account, temporarily close a port, etc. Example: The most classic example of a clipping level is failed login attempts. If you have a system configured to lock a user's account after three failed login attemts, that is the "clipping level". The other answers are not correct because: Acceptance level, forgiveness level, and logging level are nonsensical terms that do not exist (to my knowledge) within network security. Reference: Official ISC2 Guide - The term "clipping level" is not in the glossary or index of that book. I cannot find it in the text either. However, I'm quite certain that it would be considered part of the CBK, despite its exclusion from the Official Guide. All in One Third Edition page: 136 - 137
To Paraphrase K05, according to the remarks from question #24 "Acceptance level, forgiveness level, and logging level are nonsensical terms that do not exist (to my knowledge) within network security."
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K05
Highly Voted 6 months, 3 weeks agoDefenestrateIT
Most Recent 6 months agoCraigB83
6 months agoCraigB83
6 months ago