Magna Concursos

Foram encontradas 534 questões.

636213 Ano: 2011
Disciplina: Administração Financeira e Orçamentária
Banca: FCC
Orgão: TRE-RN
Na esfera federal, o projeto de lei orçamentária será encaminhado até
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
636212 Ano: 2011
Disciplina: Administração Financeira e Orçamentária
Banca: FCC
Orgão: TRE-RN
A afirmativa de que a lei orçamentária deve conter todas as receitas e despesas a serem realizadas, inclusive as de operações de créditos autorizadas em lei, decorre da aplicação do princípio orçamentário da
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
636211 Ano: 2011
Disciplina: Auditoria
Banca: FCC
Orgão: TRE-RN
A auditoria é o conjunto de técnicas que visa avaliar a gestão pública, pelos processos e resultados gerenciais, e a aplicação de recursos públicos por entidades de direito público e privado, mediante a confrontação entre uma situação encontrada com um determinado critério técnico, operacional ou legal. No âmbito do Sistema de Controle Interno do Poder Executivo Federal, a auditoria classifica-se em
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
636210 Ano: 2011
Disciplina: Auditoria
Banca: FCC
Orgão: TRE-RN
No âmbito do Controle Interno Federal, os Relatórios de Auditorias constituem-se na forma pela qual os resultados dos trabalhos realizados são levados ao conhecimento das autoridades competentes com algumas finalidades. Dentre estas, encaminha-se o relatório
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
636209 Ano: 2011
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: FCC
Orgão: TRE-RN
enunciado 636209-1
enunciado 636209-2
A alternativa que preenche corretamente a lacuna enunciado 636209-3 é
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
636208 Ano: 2011
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: FCC
Orgão: TRE-RN
Provas:
Technology and legal pressure have changed
spammers’ terms of trade. They long relied on sending
more e-mails from more computers, knowing that some
will get through. But it is hard to send 100m e-mails
without someone noticing. In 2008 researchers from the
University of California at Berkeley and San Diego posed
as spammers, infiltrated a botnet and measured its
success rate. The investigation confirmed only 28 “sales”
on 350m e-mail messages sent, a conversion rate
under .00001%. Since then the numbers have got worse.
But spammers are a creative bunch.
enunciado 636208-1 of tricking
consumers into a purchase, they are stealing their money
directly. Links used to direct the gullible to a site selling
counterfeits. Now they install “Trojan” software that
ransacks hard drives for bank details and the like.
Spammers also have become more sophisticated
about exploiting trust. In few places is it granted more
readily than on social-networking sites. Twitter, a forum for
short, telegram-like messages, estimates that only 1% of
its traffic is spam. But researchers from the University of
California at Berkeley and the University of Illinois at
Champaign-Urbana show that 8% of links published were
shady, with
enunciado 636208-2 of them leading to scams and the rest to
Trojans. Links in Twitter messages, they found, are over
20 times more likely to get clicked than those in e-mail
spam.
Nor is Facebook as safe as it seems. As an
experiment, BitDefender, an online-security firm, set up
fake profiles on the social network and asked strangers to
enter into a digital friendship. They were able to create as
many as 100 new friends a day. Offering a profile picture,
particularly of a pretty woman, increased their odds. When
the firm’s researchers expanded their requests to strangers
who shared even one mutual friend, almost half accepted.
Worse, a quarter of BitDefender’s new friends clicked on
links posted by the firm, even when the destination was
obscured.


(Adapted from http://www.economist.com/node/17519964)
Segundo o texto,
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
636207 Ano: 2011
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: FCC
Orgão: TRE-RN
enunciado 636207-1
enunciado 636207-2
A alternativa que preenche corretamente a lacuna enunciado 636207-3 é
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
636206 Ano: 2011
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: FCC
Orgão: TRE-RN
Provas:
Technology and legal pressure have changed
spammers’ terms of trade. They long relied on sending
more e-mails from more computers, knowing that some
will get through. But it is hard to send 100m e-mails
without someone noticing. In 2008 researchers from the
University of California at Berkeley and San Diego posed
as spammers, infiltrated a botnet and measured its
success rate. The investigation confirmed only 28 “sales”
on 350m e-mail messages sent, a conversion rate
under .00001%. Since then the numbers have got worse.
But spammers are a creative bunch.
enunciado 636206-1 of tricking
consumers into a purchase, they are stealing their money
directly. Links used to direct the gullible to a site selling
counterfeits. Now they install “Trojan” software that
ransacks hard drives for bank details and the like.
Spammers also have become more sophisticated
about exploiting trust. In few places is it granted more
readily than on social-networking sites. Twitter, a forum for
short, telegram-like messages, estimates that only 1% of
its traffic is spam. But researchers from the University of
California at Berkeley and the University of Illinois at
Champaign-Urbana show that 8% of links published were
shady, with
enunciado 636206-2 of them leading to scams and the rest to
Trojans. Links in Twitter messages, they found, are over
20 times more likely to get clicked than those in e-mail
spam.
Nor is Facebook as safe as it seems. As an
experiment, BitDefender, an online-security firm, set up
fake profiles on the social network and asked strangers to
enter into a digital friendship. They were able to create as
many as 100 new friends a day. Offering a profile picture,
particularly of a pretty woman, increased their odds. When
the firm’s researchers expanded their requests to strangers
who shared even one mutual friend, almost half accepted.
Worse, a quarter of BitDefender’s new friends clicked on
links posted by the firm, even when the destination was
obscured.


(Adapted from http://www.economist.com/node/17519964)
A alternativa que preenche corretamente a lacuna enunciado 636206-3 é
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
636205 Ano: 2011
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: FCC
Orgão: TRE-RN
Provas:
Technology and legal pressure have changed
spammers’ terms of trade. They long relied on sending
more e-mails from more computers, knowing that some
will get through. But it is hard to send 100m e-mails
without someone noticing. In 2008 researchers from the
University of California at Berkeley and San Diego posed
as spammers, infiltrated a botnet and measured its
success rate. The investigation confirmed only 28 “sales”
on 350m e-mail messages sent, a conversion rate
under .00001%. Since then the numbers have got worse.
But spammers are a creative bunch.
enunciado 636205-1 of tricking
consumers into a purchase, they are stealing their money
directly. Links used to direct the gullible to a site selling
counterfeits. Now they install “Trojan” software that
ransacks hard drives for bank details and the like.
Spammers also have become more sophisticated
about exploiting trust. In few places is it granted more
readily than on social-networking sites. Twitter, a forum for
short, telegram-like messages, estimates that only 1% of
its traffic is spam. But researchers from the University of
California at Berkeley and the University of Illinois at
Champaign-Urbana show that 8% of links published were
shady, with
enunciado 636205-2 of them leading to scams and the rest to
Trojans. Links in Twitter messages, they found, are over
20 times more likely to get clicked than those in e-mail
spam.
Nor is Facebook as safe as it seems. As an
experiment, BitDefender, an online-security firm, set up
fake profiles on the social network and asked strangers to
enter into a digital friendship. They were able to create as
many as 100 new friends a day. Offering a profile picture,
particularly of a pretty woman, increased their odds. When
the firm’s researchers expanded their requests to strangers
who shared even one mutual friend, almost half accepted.
Worse, a quarter of BitDefender’s new friends clicked on
links posted by the firm, even when the destination was
obscured.


(Adapted from http://www.economist.com/node/17519964)
Em qual das alternativas abaixo like tem o mesmo significado que tem no texto? (2º parágrafo)
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
636204 Ano: 2011
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: FCC
Orgão: TRE-RN
Provas:
Technology and legal pressure have changed
spammers’ terms of trade. They long relied on sending
more e-mails from more computers, knowing that some
will get through. But it is hard to send 100m e-mails
without someone noticing. In 2008 researchers from the
University of California at Berkeley and San Diego posed
as spammers, infiltrated a botnet and measured its
success rate. The investigation confirmed only 28 “sales”
on 350m e-mail messages sent, a conversion rate
under .00001%. Since then the numbers have got worse.
But spammers are a creative bunch.
enunciado 636204-1 of tricking
consumers into a purchase, they are stealing their money
directly. Links used to direct the gullible to a site selling
counterfeits. Now they install “Trojan” software that
ransacks hard drives for bank details and the like.
Spammers also have become more sophisticated
about exploiting trust. In few places is it granted more
readily than on social-networking sites. Twitter, a forum for
short, telegram-like messages, estimates that only 1% of
its traffic is spam. But researchers from the University of
California at Berkeley and the University of Illinois at
Champaign-Urbana show that 8% of links published were
shady, with
enunciado 636204-2 of them leading to scams and the rest to
Trojans. Links in Twitter messages, they found, are over
20 times more likely to get clicked than those in e-mail
spam.
Nor is Facebook as safe as it seems. As an
experiment, BitDefender, an online-security firm, set up
fake profiles on the social network and asked strangers to
enter into a digital friendship. They were able to create as
many as 100 new friends a day. Offering a profile picture,
particularly of a pretty woman, increased their odds. When
the firm’s researchers expanded their requests to strangers
who shared even one mutual friend, almost half accepted.
Worse, a quarter of BitDefender’s new friends clicked on
links posted by the firm, even when the destination was
obscured.


(Adapted from http://www.economist.com/node/17519964)
A alternativa que preenche corretamente a lacuna enunciado 636204-3 é
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas