1) Which of the following is an example of personal data? a) Red car b) 27 Apple trees c) Born 15th July 2006, named John Smith d) A blue jacket 2) What does the Data Protection Act protect? a) Criminal data b) Personal data stored by organisations c) Copyrights d) Internet cookies 3) What is the difference between data and information? a) There is no difference b) Data is random, information is stored c) Data is raw facts or figures, information has meaning d) Information is binary, data is decimal 4) Which one of these is an example of data becoming information? a) 37” screen b) “37°C” recorded as a patient’s temperature c) A list of names d) The number 1000 5) Which of these is NOT one of the 8 principles of the Data Protection Act (1998)? a) Data must be accurate and up to date b) Data must not be kept longer than necessary c) Data can be used for any reason d) Data must be used fairly and lawfully 6) What must organisations do if they collect your personal data? a) Share it freely b) Keep it secret forever c) Use it lawfully and securely d) Sell it to advertisers 7) Which of the following is an example of information? a) “Blue” b) “Student age = 14” c) “Temperature” d) “Green” 8) What does ‘data must be secure’ mean in the Data Protection Act? a) Lock it in a cupboard b) Store it online only c) Use passwords and encryption d) Print everything 9) What is social engineering in cyber security? a) A type of firewall that blocks unknown users b) Tricking people into giving away personal or security information c) Writing complex code to hack a system d) Using robots to scan social media for data 10) Which of these is 'information' rather than 'data'? a) London b) 23/05/2005 c) Date of Birth: 23/05/2005 d) Blue

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