Q: 8
Scenario:
A financial services company is planning a new AI project to assess creditworthiness. The AI team is
mapping out what tasks should be completed during theplanning phaseof the AI lifecycle.
The planning phase of the AI lifecycle includes all of the following EXCEPT:
Options
Discussion
Option C but if the org treats 'architecture' as a high-level planning deliverable (like platform selection or broad infra strategy), it might swap. Usually though, specific architecture comes later in design phase. Anyone see guidance that treats C as planning?
C. That's the one that doesn't belong in the planning phase.
C is the odd one, since picking the architecture happens during design not planning. The rest (assumptions, governance, context) all fit into initial scoping. Pretty sure that's how IAPP splits it up, but open if someone reads it another way.
C is right, choice of architecture comes in design not planning. D might look tricky since context can evolve, but for IAPP the initial context is mapped out early. Anyone see IAPP treat this differently on practice tests?
C vs D but I'm pretty sure C is right here. Selecting the actual architecture is a design phase activity, not planning. D is tempting but "context" is always something you define upfront-helps shape requirements and governance. C's the odd one out if you look at typical IAPP process material. Someone might trip over D thinking it's more technical though. Open to pushback if folks see it differently.
C/D? I think C is right since picking architecture usually fits with design not planning, D can be a bit of a trap if you read it fast. Disagree?
C tbh, picking architecture usually falls under design not planning.
For me, C since picking an architecture is technically a design phase task, not planning, unless they blur the lines.
Its C in this case. The choice of architecture is always a design decision, not part of early planning. Planning is more about scope, goals, and governance. Pretty sure that matches the IAPP model, but open if someone disagrees.
I get why C is correct here, because picking the architecture usually comes after planning when you move into actual design and build. Planning is all about figuring out what you're trying to solve, the constraints, and how you'll govern things. I'm pretty sure that's how IAPP splits it up, but let me know if someone has seen a situation where architecture choice sneaks into planning.
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