Question Type:
Weaken (claim, not argument)
Stimulus Breakdown:
Claim: a bank's internal audit procedures will normally know if you accidentally got credited with a large sum of money.
Answer Anticipation:
There's no argument/reasoning here, so we just have to find an answer that helps us believe that a bank's internal audit procedures will find out if a random sum of money is suddenly deposited into someone's account.
Correct Answer:
A
Answer Choice Analysis:
(A) This looks okay. There's a fallback system for large transactions, which is what we're focused on. So a mistake would have to make it past two separate computer programs.
(B) This has nothing to do with someone getting an accidental infusion of money in their account.
(C) This might help the customer spot the unusual credit, but this has nothing to do with the bank's internal procedures.
(D) Slowly increased is not very strong. There's also an implication that "nowadays" we have significantly more transactions than 100 years ago.
(E) We don't care about hackers getting into bank's computers. We care about bank auditors discovering that a bunch of money was accidentally put in someone's account. This answer tells us nothing about how they do that.
Takeaway/Pattern: The only answers that sound like information about a bank's internal audit procedures are (A) and (D). And (D) is very weakly worded, especially since it's counterbalanced by the idea in the stimulus that there are many more transactions nowadays.
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