- Fri Jan 21, 2011 12:00 am
#22833
Complete Question Explanation
Must Be True. The correct answer choice is (C)
The author recommends that businesses introduce minor variations into their operating system software, because a single operating system would leave the business vulnerable to viral invasions. The conditional reasoning that underlies this argument can be summarized in the following way:
Answer choice (A): This answer choice may be attractive, but it is too strong and therefore incorrect. While it is possible that a business's failure to introduce variety into its operating systems would lead to loss of data, such an outcome is by no means guaranteed. This difference is seen in the stimulus with the phrase "the vandal can then destroy much of the data on all the computers" vs the answer choice, which states that, "it will lose data on its computers ." We cannot be sure the business will for certain lose data, and hence this answer is not an inference.
Answer choice (B): According to the stimulus, a virus can destroy "much of the data on all the computers," not "all the data on [a given] computer." It is imperative to closely watch the words used in the stimulus to describe quantities.
Answer choice (C): This is the correct answer choice. Answer choice (C) is a reiteration of the fourth sentence in the stimulus: if minor variations are introduced, unauthorized access to all computers will be virtually eliminated. The term "virtually" leaves open the possibility that not every single computer will be completely protected from viral invasion.
Answer choice (D): This statement is inconsistent with the argument, which is only about multiple, linked computer systems. Furthermore, it is plausible that computer systems that are not linked can be more easily protected from computer viruses than multiple, linked computer systems. This answer choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (E): While variations can be introduced without any loss of computer compatibility to the business, the author never said that it would be easier to access the data on the computers that use such software. If anything, access to data may become more difficult to protect the it from computer vandalism.
Must Be True. The correct answer choice is (C)
The author recommends that businesses introduce minor variations into their operating system software, because a single operating system would leave the business vulnerable to viral invasions. The conditional reasoning that underlies this argument can be summarized in the following way:
- Minor Variations → Unauthorized Access Virtually Eliminated
Answer choice (A): This answer choice may be attractive, but it is too strong and therefore incorrect. While it is possible that a business's failure to introduce variety into its operating systems would lead to loss of data, such an outcome is by no means guaranteed. This difference is seen in the stimulus with the phrase "the vandal can then destroy much of the data on all the computers" vs the answer choice, which states that, "it will lose data on its computers ." We cannot be sure the business will for certain lose data, and hence this answer is not an inference.
Answer choice (B): According to the stimulus, a virus can destroy "much of the data on all the computers," not "all the data on [a given] computer." It is imperative to closely watch the words used in the stimulus to describe quantities.
Answer choice (C): This is the correct answer choice. Answer choice (C) is a reiteration of the fourth sentence in the stimulus: if minor variations are introduced, unauthorized access to all computers will be virtually eliminated. The term "virtually" leaves open the possibility that not every single computer will be completely protected from viral invasion.
Answer choice (D): This statement is inconsistent with the argument, which is only about multiple, linked computer systems. Furthermore, it is plausible that computer systems that are not linked can be more easily protected from computer viruses than multiple, linked computer systems. This answer choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (E): While variations can be introduced without any loss of computer compatibility to the business, the author never said that it would be easier to access the data on the computers that use such software. If anything, access to data may become more difficult to protect the it from computer vandalism.