exam questions

Exam MS-900 All Questions

View all questions & answers for the MS-900 exam

Exam MS-900 topic 1 question 281 discussion

Actual exam question from Microsoft's MS-900
Question #: 281
Topic #: 1
[All MS-900 Questions]

A company is evaluating Microsoft 365.
You need to determine the principles of Zero Trust.
Which two principles should you identify? Each correct answer presents part of the solution.
NOTE: Each correct selection is worth one point.

  • A. Identify potential change
  • B. Assume breach
  • C. Verify explicitly
  • D. Implement change
Show Suggested Answer Hide Answer
Suggested Answer: BC 🗳️
Assume breach -
Building our processes and systems assuming that a breach has already happened or soon will. This means using redundant security mechanisms, collecting system telemetry, using it to detect anomalies, and wherever possible, connecting that insight to automation to allow you to prevent, respond and remediate in near-real-time.

Verify explicitly -
To verify explicitly means we should examine all pertinent aspects of access requests instead of assuming trust based on a weak assurance like network location.
Examine the identity, endpoint, network, and resource then apply threat intelligence and analytics to assess the context of each access request.

Comments

Chosen Answer:
This is a voting comment (?). It is better to Upvote an existing comment if you don't have anything to add.
Switch to a voting comment New
francoisurban
3 months, 4 weeks ago
BC is correct since it is the principle of Zero Trust https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/security/zero-trust/zero-trust-overview
upvoted 1 times
...
Nazz1977
11 months ago
correct
upvoted 1 times
...
Murtuza
1 year, 8 months ago
B and C are correct
upvoted 2 times
...
Community vote distribution
A (35%)
C (25%)
B (20%)
Other
Most Voted
A voting comment increases the vote count for the chosen answer by one.

Upvoting a comment with a selected answer will also increase the vote count towards that answer by one. So if you see a comment that you already agree with, you can upvote it instead of posting a new comment.

SaveCancel
Loading ...