Ethical Hacking
Conduct your own social engineering experiments.
While at a restaurant, convenience store, bank, place of business, or any shopping location, ask you waiter or waitress, bartender, server, sales clerk, or cashier personal questions about their family or their interests. How much information are you able to obtain about this person you do not know?
Name, address, age, religion, political beliefs, place of birth, pets, hobbies, number of children, type of car they drive, or any other information you think you can obtain.
Write your findings in either a list or in paragraph form.
Sample Solution
are many potential types of errors in survey sampling. According to Groves (1989)[see 1], the survey errors can be divided into two major groups: First, the errors of nonobservation where the sampled elements use only part of the target population, and the second one is the errors of observation, where the listed data deviate from the truth. Some examples of errors of nonobservation can be ascribed to sampling, coverage or nonresponse which is going to be analysed in the later part of this report. On the other hand, examples of errors of observation can be attributed to the interviewer, respondent or method of data collection. Both of our sources of obdurate errors can vigorously affect the accuracy of a survey. However, these errors cannot be eliminated from a survey but their effects can be reduced by careful devotion to an acceptable sampling plan. Some ways to reduce those errors are: callbacks (where the interviewer calls again the nonrespondents), offer rewards and motivation for encouraging responses, train better the interviewers, scrutinise the questionnaires to be sure that the form has been filled correctly and have an accurate questionnaire construction.