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false
false
If you get caught claiming false insurance on an expensive mobile device, this could mean that you go to jail. Fraud is one thing that you could be charged with, and plenty of others.
true
The requirement is to at LEAST encrypt all sensitive and unclassified information not cleared for public release that is stored on removable and mobile computing devices. That may very well mean that the entire media must be encrypted, but there are acceptable solutions that only a portion of the storage media - as an encrypted file or encrypted partition. It is important to select a truly effective encryption solution however. If the keys to decrypt the information are stored on the same device, it isn't going to provide much protection. Likewise, if it is easy to break the encryption it isn't going to help much. If temporary files store the information in unencrypted form, then again it isn't really protected. Once encrypted, the decryption key(s) need to be protected and maintained such that an authorized user can still access the data. If you lose the key and have no backup, you have just caused a self-initiated Denial-of-Service.
FALSE
This question is FALSE. The oil wells ARE expected to disrupt the sensitive economic system.
False
Any mobile computing device, used in a public area, should be password-protected.
yes
False
False. If the operating system already has a more recent driver for the device, there is no reason to run the install disc.