Answer:
No
Explanation:
Because love is sad (am sorry)
The correct answers are "Only a small fraction is securely encrypted; the remainder is poorly encrypted" and "Anybody can get their hands on more information".
It is true that not all of the internet traffic is protected. About 60% of this traffic is encrypted; the rest remains a work in progress. This puts uncovered information at the risk of getting collected by able computer security technicians.
With the increasing availability of tools to simulate firewall security breaches, free to download from the internet, anybody who takes the time to learn these practices is capable of compromising unencrypted information - or even encrypted, depending on their skill.
The other options are not to be considered supportive of the central idea since:
The quantity of internet users is irrelevant to the fact that whether the current amount of information is at risk or not. The precautions these users take when browsing the web however, are a more contributing fact to the idea.
Most people do not take adequate precautions when it comes to their privacy, evidence being that the amount of personal data submitted to social networks allows their administrators to take advantage of it, selling the information to advertisers and ensuring a multi-millionaire income.
Nerves Frog
Nerve Frog
Nervous Frog
Lily Frog
Which sounds correct to you? Its obviously Nervous xD
Answer:
Option B. Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice is an example of a novel of manners.
Explanation:
Pride and Prejudice is perhaps considered the emblem of what is known as a novel of manners, which is a work of fiction that recreates the social structure within a society, with detailed observation to its customs, values and code.
Pride and Prejudice is a story of love and every day life of rural English society during the Georgian Era. the rules, customs and moral values that society held during that time is a key element in how the story breaks down.