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CertNexus ITS-110 Exam - Topic 7 Question 63 Discussion

Actual exam question for CertNexus's ITS-110 exam
Question #: 63
Topic #: 7
[All ITS-110 Questions]

A web administrator is concerned about injection attacks. Which of the following mitigation techniques should the web administrator implement?

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Suggested Answer: B

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Samira
11 days ago
A) SSO is good, but it doesn't stop injections.
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Tawanna
16 days ago
Wait, can parameter validation really stop all injection attacks?
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Donte
21 days ago
Two-factor authentication is definitely a game changer!
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Bette
26 days ago
I think SSO is more important than that.
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Rutha
1 month ago
B is the obvious answer. Anything else and you're just asking for trouble.
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Vanda
1 month ago
B? More like "Beware the injection!" Haha, gotta love those web security jokes.
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Vanesa
1 month ago
B is the right choice. Validation is the first line of defense against injection attacks.
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Berry
2 months ago
I agree, B is the way to go. Gotta keep those hackers out!
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Shawnee
2 months ago
Definitely B. Validating user input is crucial to prevent SQL injection and other nasty stuff.
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Vicky
2 months ago
I thought two-factor authentication was important, but I don't recall it being a direct mitigation for injection attacks.
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Fidelia
2 months ago
We practiced a similar question, and I think requiring strong passwords is more about access control than injection prevention.
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Starr
2 months ago
I'm not entirely sure, but I feel like SSO might not directly address injection attacks.
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Rutha
2 months ago
I think B) Parameter validation is the best choice. It directly addresses injection attacks.
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Lazaro
3 months ago
B) Parameter validation is the correct answer to mitigate injection attacks.
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Elsa
3 months ago
Parameter validation is a must!
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Staci
3 months ago
Agreed! Parameter validation ensures only valid data goes through.
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Bernadine
3 months ago
Strong passwords are good, but not enough.
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Colette
3 months ago
I remember discussing injection attacks in class, and I think parameter validation is crucial for preventing them.
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Shad
4 months ago
Parameter validation is the key. Gotta sanitize those inputs and make sure nothing malicious gets through. That's the best way to stop injection in its tracks.
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Angelica
4 months ago
I'm a bit confused. Wouldn't configuring SSO help with authentication and access control? How does that relate to injection attacks specifically?
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Jade
4 months ago
Definitely parameter validation. That's the classic way to prevent injection vulnerabilities. The other options don't really address the core issue.
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Rasheeda
4 months ago
Hmm, I'm a bit unsure. Is parameter validation really the best option? I feel like requiring 2FA might be a stronger defense against injection attacks.
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Regenia
4 months ago
I think parameter validation is the way to go here. Gotta make sure those inputs are clean before they hit the database.
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