Q: 6
Which of the following BEST prevents control gaps in the Zero Trust model when implementing in the
environment?
Options
Discussion
C. had something similar in a mock. Strong architecture is always the main thing for avoiding control gaps in Zero Trust. Seen every practice test stick with C for this topic.
Option C
Makes sense to pick C here.
Option C If the question said "most agile implementation" instead of BEST for control gaps, would B make sense?
C . The trap here is A since mixing solutions without a unified architecture can actually make gaps worse. Pretty confident C is what ISACA looks for in this context, but happy to hear other arguments.
C feels right here, since a solid technical architecture keeps all the controls integrated and reduces any holes. Multiple solutions (A) can actually cause more gaps if not unified. If someone has a different take let me know, but I'm pretty sure about C.
Its C. Robust technical architecture ties all security controls together, so fewer gaps slip through. Pretty sure that’s the main idea here.
C imo, that's what the official guides and most practice tests push. Robust technical architecture ties the Zero Trust pieces together so gaps are less likely. Not 100% sure but I'd check official ISACA material to confirm.
Not sure why everyone skips A here. Relying on multiple solutions for Zero Trust, so A.
C imo. Only a robust technical architecture really keeps everything consistent and tight in Zero Trust. Multiple solutions (A) just end up creating silos, which can leave gaps. Pretty sure C is what the exam wants here, but open to other takes.
Be respectful. No spam.