curriculum/challenges/english/blocks/learn-common-phrasal-verbs-and-idioms/6858baad5682dd519ed82e9a.md
Read the text and answer the question below.
After talking to Jake, Linda drafts up a list of his suggestions and implementation ideas.
1. Tooltips and Visual Indicators for Password Strength
Use tooltips or visual elements to show users how strong their password is. We should add a real-time strength meter below the password input, with color coding from red to green and labels like Weak, Moderate, and Strong. Hoverable tooltips or info icons could explain what makes a password stronger — like including numbers, symbols, and both uppercase and lowercase letters.
2. Custom Security Questions for Password Recovery
Allow users to create their own security questions instead of choosing from a preset list. We could add a "Create your own question" option and guide users with examples or prompts to help them come up with something both secure and memorable. We'll also need to build in some basic checks to avoid overly simple or generic questions.
3. Real-Time Alerts for Suspicious Activity
Use urgent, interactive pop-ups with intuitive graphics to alert users. We can design a system where a warning pops up in real time if something unusual happens, like a login from a new device. These alerts should block further action until the user responds, and include strong visuals like warning icons and concise, clear messaging.
4. Interactive Quiz for Phishing Awareness
Integrate a short quiz into the onboarding process to teach users how to recognize phishing attempts. This could be a fun, interactive module with real-world scenarios, such as identifying suspicious links in emails. We can add instant feedback for each question and maybe even small rewards or progress tracking to make it engaging.
How does Jake think they could educate users about phishing?
By sending them warning messages when they click bad links.
Jake didn't mention using warnings after mistakes.
By giving them a quiz during onboarding to teach about phishing.
By showing pop-ups every time a suspicious email is opened.
Jake doesn't suggest pop-up alerts for this.
By asking them to read a guide before creating an account.
Jake suggested something more interactive than a written guide.
2
To answer this, go to item 4. Interactive Quiz for Phishing Awareness in Linda's list. In the first sentence, you'll see Jake's suggestion. Read it to be able to answer this question correctly.