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Google Professional Chrome Enterprise Administrator Exam - Topic 4 Question 15 Discussion

Actual exam question for Google's Professional Chrome Enterprise Administrator exam
Question #: 15
Topic #: 4
[All Professional Chrome Enterprise Administrator Questions]

[Manage Chrome Enterprise in the Cloud]

A systems engineer recently cloud enrolled Chrome browsers, which were previously managed via group policy, and deployed a policy through Chrome Enterprise Core. However, the policy is not applying. After validating the policy via chrome://policy, the status shows a warning conflict

What is the best way to resolve this issue?

Show Suggested Answer Hide Answer
Suggested Answer: C

Contribute your Thoughts:

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Yoko
6 hours ago
You might need to check the precedence order.
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Twana
5 days ago
Hmm, this policy conflict is a real head-scratcher. Time to break out the Chrome crystal ball!
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Chantell
10 days ago
Restart the computer? Really? A) Restart the computer to apply the policy changes, that's just too easy.
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Lenna
1 month ago
B) Adjust the policy merge list setting, that's the key to resolving this conflict.
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Tatum
1 month ago
D) Re-enroll the Chrome browser to reset the policy is the way to go. Gotta start fresh sometimes!
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Lucy
1 month ago
C) Check and configure the precedence order seems like the right approach here.
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France
2 months ago
Restarting the computer seems too basic for this issue, but I guess it could help in some cases. I'm leaning towards checking the precedence order.
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Thersa
2 months ago
I practiced a similar question, and I feel like re-enrolling the browser might be a bit drastic. Maybe there's a simpler fix?
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Janessa
2 months ago
I think checking the precedence order could be important since it might help identify which policy is taking priority.
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Gladys
2 months ago
I remember something about policy conflicts, but I'm not sure if adjusting the merge list is the right move here.
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Delbert
2 months ago
This seems like a pretty straightforward policy issue. I'd go with option C and check the precedence order to see if that's the root cause of the problem.
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Val
2 months ago
Re-enrolling the Chrome browser could be a good option, but I'd want to make sure that's really necessary before trying that. I'd probably start with option B and see if adjusting the policy merge list setting resolves the conflict.
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Truman
3 months ago
Restarting the computer is usually a good first step, but in this case, it sounds like there might be a deeper issue with the policy configuration. I'd go with option C and check the precedence order.
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Caren
3 months ago
Okay, I think the key here is to figure out what's causing the policy conflict. I'd start by checking the policy merge list setting and see if that needs to be adjusted.
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Elenore
3 months ago
Hmm, this one seems tricky. I'll need to carefully review the policy settings and check the precedence order to see what might be causing the conflict.
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