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Arcitura Education C90.02 Exam - Topic 9 Question 96 Discussion

Actual exam question for Arcitura Education's C90.02 exam
Question #: 96
Topic #: 9
[All C90.02 Questions]

Black box testing refers to a technique where testers are provided with ___________________ visibility into an IT resource's implementation architecture.

Select the correct answer.

Show Suggested Answer Hide Answer
Suggested Answer: C

Contribute your Thoughts:

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Cherry
3 months ago
Yup, black box means we don't see the inner workings at all.
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Charlene
3 months ago
I thought it was more about limited visibility, not none.
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Dorothy
3 months ago
Wait, are we sure about that? Seems too simple.
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Louann
4 months ago
Agreed, option C is the right choice.
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Chantay
4 months ago
It's definitely no visibility!
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Mitsue
4 months ago
I might be confused, but I thought black box testing meant you have some visibility, just not complete. Maybe it's option D?
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Moon
4 months ago
I’m not entirely sure, but I feel like black box testing is all about testing functionality without knowing the internals, which makes me think option C is correct.
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Marshall
4 months ago
I remember practicing a question like this, and I think it was about having complete visibility, but that doesn't sound right for black box testing.
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Kanisha
5 months ago
I think black box testing means testers have no visibility into the implementation, so I’m leaning towards option C.
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Gregg
5 months ago
I'm pretty confident the answer is C, "no" visibility. Black box testing is all about testing the functionality without access to the internal implementation details. The tester is like an outside observer, not an insider with full knowledge of how the system works.
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Celestine
5 months ago
Okay, I've got this. Black box testing means the tester treats the system as a black box and only focuses on the inputs and outputs, without needing to know how it works under the hood. So the right answer is C, "no" visibility into the implementation.
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Blondell
5 months ago
Hmm, I'm a little unsure about this one. I know black box testing is about testing without knowing the internal structure, but I can't remember if that means "no" visibility or just "limited" visibility. I'll have to think this through carefully.
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Lai
5 months ago
I'm pretty sure this is asking about black box testing, which means the tester doesn't have access to the internal implementation details. So the correct answer is C, "no" visibility into the IT resource's architecture.
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Janna
5 months ago
Wait, I'm confused. Isn't black box testing when you have some visibility, just not complete visibility? I think the answer might be A, "complete" visibility, since that's the opposite of black box testing. Let me double-check that...
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Leila
5 months ago
Okay, I think I've got a handle on this. The settings seem to be focused on preventing network-based attacks, so I'm guessing the answer is A - Denial-of-Service attack using network broadcasts.
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Ellen
1 year ago
Complete visibility? That's not black box testing, that's more like white box testing. Option C is the clear winner here.
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Thea
1 year ago
Haha, yeah, it's like we're testing the IT resource's magical abilities. Option C all the way!
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Abel
1 year ago
Exactly! Black box testing means testers have no visibility into the implementation architecture. It's like testing a magical black box.
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Charolette
1 year ago
Oh, I see. So the correct answer is C) no. Thanks for clarifying!
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Nidia
1 year ago
Option C is not the correct answer. Black box testing actually provides no visibility into an IT resource's implementation architecture.
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Novella
1 year ago
But black box testing is all about limited visibility, so I still think the answer is C) no.
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Lucy
1 year ago
I disagree, I believe the answer is A) complete.
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Novella
1 year ago
I think the answer is C) no.
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Louann
1 year ago
I'm going with option C. No visibility - that's the whole point of black box testing, right?
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Micaela
1 year ago
That makes sense, black box testing focuses on testing the functionality without knowing the internal workings.
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Brittney
1 year ago
So, the correct answer would be option C - no visibility.
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Laticia
1 year ago
Exactly, it's like testing from an outsider's perspective without knowing the internal details.
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Chantay
1 year ago
I think you're right, black box testing is all about having no visibility into the implementation architecture.
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