The correct answer is C. This feature is to prevent IPS Enforcement to interfere with important Security Gateway operations, such as Control Connections . IPS Implied Exceptions are designed as safeguard exceptions for traffic that is necessary for the Security Gateway, management, or Check Point infrastructure to operate correctly. The purpose is not to define general unmatched-traffic behavior. Instead, they prevent IPS enforcement from disrupting essential control-plane and gateway-related communications. Check Point’s Threat Prevention exception documentation shows that IPS exceptions are a formal part of policy tuning and that exception changes are enforced through policy installation.
The operational logic is straightforward: IPS protections can be aggressive, and some protections inspect protocol behavior that may resemble attack traffic. If critical control connections, management channels, clustering traffic, or internal gateway operations were treated exactly like ordinary data-plane traffic, IPS could interfere with the stability of the platform. Implied Exceptions provide a built-in safety layer to avoid that outcome. Options A, B, and D incorrectly describe rulebase cleanup behavior or layer absence behavior. Those concerns are handled by policy structure, ordered layers, and default/cleanup behavior, not by IPS Implied Exceptions. Reference topics: IPS Exceptions, Implied IPS Exceptions, control connections, gateway operations, exception rule policy installation.
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