The best answer is A. To ensure data is securely destroyed when no longer needed.
During asset decommissioning, organizations must handle storage media and data according to established data retention policies. These policies define how long data must be kept and when it should be securely destroyed. Following them helps ensure that data is not kept longer than necessary and is properly sanitized or destroyed when retention requirements have been met.
This is important for:
reducing risk of unauthorized data exposure
meeting legal and regulatory obligations
preventing sensitive information from being recovered from retired assets
limiting unnecessary storage and liability
Why the other options are incorrect:
B. To make backup copies of all company data before disposing of hardwareNot all data should be backed up indefinitely. Retention policies are about keeping data only as long as required.
C. To allow employees to access old files even after the hardware is recycledThis is not the primary purpose of retention policies during decommissioning.
D. To keep all customer data available in case it is required in the futureKeeping all data forever is not a proper retention strategy and can create legal and security problems.
From the SY0-701 perspective, asset disposal and media sanitization are closely tied to retention schedules and secure destruction practices, so A is the correct answer.