Suggested Answer:B🗳️
Sandboxing involves segregating and isolating information or processes from others within the same system or application, typically for security concerns. This is generally used for data isolation (for example, keeping different communities and populations of users isolated from other similar data).
Disagree, Sandboxing can mean many things today, but in the realm of cloud computing, sandboxing refers to the concept of a protected area being utilized for testing untested or untrusted code or to better understand if an application is working the way it was intended to work. These sandboxes are usually protected areas in memory that will not allow processes of any kind to run outside the environment or allow access inside from any other application or process.
What you see as sandbox is in the ccsp world considered an on-premise sandbox. In the cloud world, sandboxing simply means logically separating one or more environments based on eg. data classification in order to ensure different levels of security at each level.
Really weird, sandboxing is nowadays referenced with advanced threat protection where you create an environment isolated to measure the damage that this threat has to it.
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