Answer: I cant give you an exact answer, but your options are gonna be B or C.
Explanation: A computer programmer actually doesn't work with a marketing company at all, most of them work from home as it is. And a Tech Support Specialist may work with a marketing firm, but it would be strictly IT stuffs.
Answer:
uses third party CAs to validate a user's identity
Explanation:
The Digital Certificate is the only means that technically and legally guarantees the identity of a person on the Internet. This is an essential requirement for institutions to offer secure services over the Internet. Further:
The digital certificate allows the electronic signature of documents The recipient of a signed document can be sure that it is the original and has not been tampered with and the author of the electronic signature cannot deny the authorship of this signature.
The digital certificate allows encryption of communications. Only the recipient of the information will be able to access its content.
The process that determines how bits are represented on the medium is called encoding. It is the process of converting a certain data into a particular format that is required for a certain processing need like program execution, data transmission or file conversion.
Answer:
D. The Active Directory Users and Computers
Explanation:
The Active Directory Users and Computers (ADUC) is one of the many tools used to administer the Active Directory and it is the most common tool that Windows admins use on the domain controller. It provides most of the admins functions such as
i. resetting of password
ii. unlocking users
iii. delegating of permissions to users to manage group policy
iv. managing Active Directory objects - users, computers, contacts, groups - and their attributes.
Other tools are Active Directory Component Services (allows to manage component services), Active Directory Domains and Trusts (allows to manage trusts between forests and domains), Active Directory Administrative Center (allows to manage password policies and even get the history of PowerShell logs).
<em>Hope this helps!</em>