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ISC2 SSCP Exam - Topic 1 Question 2 Discussion

Actual exam question for ISC2's SSCP exam
Question #: 2
Topic #: 1
[All SSCP Questions]

Which of the following is not a logical control when implementing logical access security?

Show Suggested Answer Hide Answer
Suggested Answer: C

Employee badges are considered Physical so would not be a logical control.

The following answers are incorrect:

userids. Is incorrect because userids are a type of logical control.

access profiles. Is incorrect because access profiles are a type of logical control.

passwords. Is incorrect because passwords are a type of logical control.


Contribute your Thoughts:

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Sarina
4 months ago
I thought badges were part of security too, this is confusing!
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Nu
4 months ago
Yup, access profiles and passwords are key for logical security.
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Delila
4 months ago
Wait, are we sure about that? Badges can control physical access too.
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Elza
4 months ago
Totally agree, it's all about userids and passwords!
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Lamonica
5 months ago
Employee badges aren't logical controls.
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Garry
5 months ago
I feel like I’ve seen this before in our study materials. I’m leaning towards C, since it’s more about physical access than logical access.
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Teri
5 months ago
I'm a bit confused. I thought all of these were related to access security, but I guess employee badges might not fit the logical category.
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Kate
5 months ago
I remember practicing a similar question, and I think passwords are a logical control too. Employee badges seem more physical.
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Sheron
5 months ago
I think access profiles and userids are definitely logical controls, but I'm not sure about employee badges.
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Ty
5 months ago
I'm feeling pretty confident about this one. The use of serverless services like Lambda and SQS, combined with the scalability of ECS, seems like the best way to meet the requirements. I'll double-check the details, but I think option D is the way to go.
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Harrison
5 months ago
Okay, I remember learning that market price is the price that clears the market, where quantity supplied equals quantity demanded. So option A is the correct answer.
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Peggie
5 months ago
I'm not totally sure about this one. The wording is a bit tricky, and I don't want to overthink it. I'm leaning towards Option B, since it seems the most straightforward way to add the custom manifest to the install service.
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Shawnee
5 months ago
I vaguely remember that insufficient authorization can lead to unauthorized access to various components, but does it really mean all of them here?
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Patti
5 months ago
Cisco Intersight sounds familiar for unifying management, but then there's also Meraki that could fit this description too, right?
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Janey
5 months ago
Whoa, this is a tricky one. I'm not totally sure what the right answers are. I'll try to eliminate the ones that are clearly wrong, then make my best guess on the remaining options.
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