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Cisco Exam 300-715 Topic 2 Question 77 Discussion

Actual exam question for Cisco's 300-715 exam
Question #: 77
Topic #: 2
[All 300-715 Questions]

A user changes the status of a device to stolen in the My Devices Portal of Cisco ISE. The device was originally onboarded in the BYOD wireless Portal without a certificate. The device is found later, but the user cannot re-onboard the device because Cisco ISE assigned the device to the Blocklist endpoint identity group. What must the user do in the My Devices Portal to resolve this issue?

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Suggested Answer: B

Contribute your Thoughts:

Aileen
8 months ago
Ah, I see what's going on here. The user changed the status to Stolen, which automatically put the device in the Blocklist endpoint identity group. To resolve this, we need to change the device state back to Not Registered, which is option B. Easy peasy!
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Veronika
8 months ago
Fingers crossed that it resolves the problem!
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Tu
8 months ago
Thanks, I'll give it a shot and see if it works.
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Brandon
8 months ago
Good idea, let me know if you need any help.
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Jolanda
8 months ago
I will try that out in the My Devices Portal then.
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Angella
8 months ago
Exactly, it's a simple solution to fix the issue.
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Leoma
8 months ago
That makes sense. Changing the state back should remove it from the Blocklist group.
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Kelvin
8 months ago
Option B) Change the device state from Stolen to Not Registered.
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Gerald
8 months ago
Hmm, you know, I'm kind of tempted to go with option C. If the device was originally onboarded without a certificate, then changing the BYOD registration attribute to None might be a good way to reset the device and get it back on the network. But I'm still not 100% sure.
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Corazon
8 months ago
I think the key here is that the device was originally onboarded without a certificate. That means the device is in the BYOD wireless portal, and we need to find a way to remove it from the Blocklist endpoint identity group. So, I'm going to go with option B to change the device state from Stolen to Not Registered.
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Sharmaine
8 months ago
Hmm, this question seems a bit tricky. It's testing our knowledge of the Cisco ISE portal and how to handle stolen devices. I'm leaning towards either option B or D, but I'm not entirely sure which one is the correct answer.
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