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Question
which of the following help bust this myth? myth buster badges when submit. not complying with privacy laws can happen when personal information is collected, shared, or used improperly – even without a security incident. sending personal information (e.g., a misdirected email) to the wrong person can be a data privacy event. you only need to report an incident if more than a gigabyte of data ha accidentally shared. 3/4
To determine which options help bust the myth (likely a myth about data privacy incident reporting or scope), we analyze each:
- First option: Explains non - compliance with privacy laws can occur without a security incident, which helps bust a myth that maybe only security incidents matter for privacy law compliance.
- Second option: Shows that misdirecting personal info (like an email) is a data privacy event, busting a myth that maybe only certain types of data sharing are privacy events.
- Third option: This is incorrect as data privacy incident reporting is not based on the size of data (e.g., even a small amount of personal info misshared needs reporting), so it does not bust a myth but reinforces a wrong idea. So the correct options are the first and second.
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- $\square$ Not complying with privacy laws can happen when personal information is collected, shared, or used improperly – even without a security incident. (This option is correct)
- $\square$ Sending personal information (e.g., a misdirected email) to the wrong person can be a data privacy event. (This option is correct)
- $\square$ You only need to report an incident if more than a gigabyte of data has accidentally shared. (This option is incorrect)