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IBM Exam C2090-623 Topic 9 Question 44 Discussion

Actual exam question for IBM's C2090-623 exam
Question #: 44
Topic #: 9
[All C2090-623 Questions]

Which policy rule is defined by this statement?

''If a policy has not been explicitly defined for an IBM Cognos Analytics object, then the policy that is applied to its parent object will be used to evaluate if the object can be accessed.''

Show Suggested Answer Hide Answer
Suggested Answer: C

Administrators use the retention rule update task to specify the number of reports, queries, analyses, and document objects to keep in the content store. You can specify how long to keep the history and output versions in the content store. Anything that is older than the date you specify is deleted from the content store.

Run this task only after creating and running the content archival task. If you run it before, content that was not marked for archival is permanently deleted from the content store.

References: https://www.ibm.com/support/knowledgecenter/en/SSEP7J_10.2.1/com.ibm.swg.ba.cognos.ug_cra.10.2.1.doc/t_creat_retent_rl.html


Contribute your Thoughts:

Brett
17 days ago
This is such a tricky one, but I'm leaning towards C) Union of permissions. Gotta be combining all the policies, right? *scratches head*
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Laquita
3 days ago
I think it's A) Acquired policies, because it mentions using the parent object's policy.
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Lauran
1 months ago
B) Group inheritance, definitely. It's all about how the parent object's policy gets passed down to the child objects. Simple as that!
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Shonda
17 days ago
A) Acquired policies
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Scot
2 months ago
I agree with Lacey, C) Union of permissions makes sense in this context.
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Iluminada
2 months ago
I'm gonna go with 'Acquired policies' on this one. Sounds like the policy is being 'acquired' from the parent object, you know? *winks*
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Kasandra
11 days ago
User 2: Yeah, definitely. It's all about that inheritance.
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Barbra
17 days ago
User 1: I think it's 'Acquired policies' too. Makes sense that it's inherited from the parent object.
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Lacey
2 months ago
I believe it's C) Union of permissions because it combines permissions from parent objects.
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Johnathon
2 months ago
I think the answer is A) Acquired policies.
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Shenika
2 months ago
I agree with Vincent, it makes sense that it would be B) Group inheritance.
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Vincent
2 months ago
I believe it could also be B) Group inheritance because it mentions parent object.
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Elbert
2 months ago
I think the 'Traversing to view child entries' option is the most relevant here. The question mentions accessing the object, so it's about being able to view the child entries.
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Francesco
13 days ago
D) Traversing to view child entries
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Rickie
15 days ago
C) Union of permissions
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Shantell
1 months ago
B) Group inheritance
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Major
1 months ago
A) Acquired policies
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Leota
2 months ago
Hmm, this sounds like the 'Group inheritance' policy rule to me. It makes sense that if a policy isn't defined for a specific object, it would inherit the policy from its parent.
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Lelia
2 months ago
I think the answer is A) Acquired policies.
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