"So-called anonymous tracking is not very secure—the anonymity is fairly easily broken. Cracking open that anonymous shell and merging it with personally identifiable information from other sources is a fairly easy engineering feat." Which of the following shows the correct way to omit part of this quote but maintain its meaning through an addition? "So-called anonymous tracking is not very secure...the anonymity is fairly easily broken. Cracking open that anonymous shell and merging it with personally identifiable information from other sources is a fairly easy engineering feat." "So-called anonymous tracking is not very secure—the anonymity is fairly easily broken. Cracking open that anonymous...is a fairly easy engineering feat." "So-called anonymous tracking is not very secure...[and] merging it with personally identifiable information...is a fairly easy engineering feat." "So-called anonymous tracking is not very secure—the anonymity is fairly easily broken. Cracking [it]...is a fairly easy engineering feat."
A?
You're using an addition to the quote (basically replacing part of a sentence with brackets instead) while still maintaining the same idea
Oh, Okay thanks.
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