I don't know, that doesn't sound right to me. Isn't a tombstone file used when a file download is blocked? I feel like option A is the correct answer here.
Ha, you guys are way off base. It's obviously option B - a tombstone file is used when a policy encrypts a publicly shared file. That's the whole point, to let people know the file is no longer accessible.
I'm not so sure about that. I was thinking option D might be the right answer. A tombstone file is used when a policy moves a file to legal hold, isn't it? That way you have a record of what happened, even though the original file is no longer accessible.
Hmm, this is an interesting question. I think option C makes the most sense - a tombstone file is used when a policy causes a file to be moved to quarantine, right? That's where you'd need a placeholder file to indicate what happened to the original.
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