You are planning to allow members of your team to test your chatbot. You must ensure this is done in a secure way.
A team member named User1 must test the chatbot.
You need to ensure that User1 can complete testing.
What should you do?
You are planning to allow members of your team to test your chatbot. You must ensure this is done in a secure way.
A team member named User1 must test the chatbot.
You need to ensure that User1 can complete testing.
What should you do?
To ensure that User1 can complete the testing of the chatbot, it is necessary for User1 to sign in to the authoring environment. This will allow User1 to interact directly with the chatbot in a secure and appropriate manner. Signing in as the chatbot author or using other access methods like Azure DevOps would not accurately simulate User1's experience and thus might not allow for complete and effective testing.
The answer is defo D as you are testing that the user can access the chat bot, not the author
I agree, the correct answer is D.
I'd say the issue with D is that while in the real world this is what the logical solution is, Microsoft would never suggest you sign in as another user for security/compliance reasons. Also it says you need to ensure that they can complete testing so this could be a question about granting permissions to the user. In which case A is the correct answer.
I agree with your reasoning. "A" is definitely the correct answer. As per D, if I have 100 users testing your chatbot, then I have to sign in to each user account to check whether they can complete the testing or not.
each tester need to connect to .... We can't recommend all tester users have to use the same account .... do for me A and B are out (it's a kind of identity usurpation )
there is something called, delegation
The idea is to sign to the authoring environment to give User1 permissions. So in my opinion A is correct. As Naebun said, Microsoft would never suggest you sign in as another user for security/compliance reasons.
So why are you A that is not recommended by Microsoft? Option "A" says "Sign in to the authoring environment AS the chatbot AUTHOR."
That is, if you say "A" is correct, you agree to use somebody's ID which is no, no.
Sign in to the authoring (?) OR DEVOPS environment as the chatbot author, and give the User1 access? What and how is he going to test anyway? These questions... seriously... sigh...
"What should you do?" You would never sign in as someone other than yourself. You're logging in to grant User1 access.
In exam, 11/04/2022
A. Sign in to the authoring environment as the chatbot author. You are PLANNING to allow members of your team to test your bot. Sounds to me like you need to sign in as the author and give team members permission, especially user 1. The last part of this question says "What should YOU do?" That immediately rules out C and D since you're not user 1. Question also mentions "secure way" so you should never share credentials or sign in as someone else.
Question says "What should **you** do? - not what user1 should do
This is another tricky question. The key phrase is ‘What should you do?’ which really means ‘What should you do to allow members of your team to test your chatbot in a secure way? This question is not how do you (Chatbot author) go about testing – it says that you are not doing the testing, you are facilitating by user1
We need to ensure that User1 is able to complete testing Hence D
D should be the answer
Why the provided answer is A makes no sense to me. This goes against basic IT policies wherein you do not sign in as another user with their credentials at all. I chose D as it is the simplest option. The only assumption being that the Author would have given access permissions so that User1 can sign in to the authoring environment. I have run the question through CoPilot and straight away the response was - "Sign in to the authoring environment as User1"
D. Sign in to the authoring environment as User1. Explanation: To ensure that User1 can complete testing of the chatbot securely, the most appropriate action would be to sign in to the authoring environment as User1. This allows User1 to directly interact with the chatbot in the testing environment, ensuring a smooth testing experience. Signing in as the chatbot author (option A) or signing in to Microsoft Azure DevOps (options B and C) may not provide User1 with direct access to the testing environment and may not allow them to fully test the chatbot's functionality.
As others have said, MS would never recommend that you sign on as another user, plus they make it a point that "User1 must..." and "User1 can..." . Since DevOps is out of scope, D. appears to be the right answer.
What should ""you"" do? ✅A. Sign in to the authoring environment as the chatbot author. You can't sign in as User1!!!!
D- Sign in to the authoring environment as User1. To allow members of your team to test your chatbot, you need to share your bot with them and assign them the appropriate roles
D as User1 should not be given unnecessary access to the environment,
Respuesta correcta la D, puesto que se está hablando de dicho usuario en el enunciado, además no considero que pedirle a alguien que se autentique como el usuario creador, si justamente la idea es que se pruebe como otro usuario
D is the correct answer. You need to sign in as User1. If we look at the keyword "A team member named User1 must test the chatbot" and "You need to ensure that User1 can complete testing" we can see that User1 is needed for this