ACCOUNTANTS EXAM 2026/2027 | COMPLETE EXAM
STYLE QUESTIONS | 100% VERIFIED – DETAILED
RATIONALES – PASS GUARANTEED – A+ GRADED
This exam is designed for professional certification (CPA Ethics Exam, CISA, CFE),
university courses, and continuing professional education. It covers artificial
intelligence (AI), blockchain, cloud computing, data privacy (GDPR, CCPA),
cybersecurity, algorithmic bias, robotic process automation (RPA), digital assets
(cryptocurrency), remote auditing, and emerging ethical frameworks for
technology.
Format: Each question includes the correct answer in bold and a detailed
rationale in italics.
Practice Exam: Ethics in the Digital Age – Challenges for
Accountants
Section 1: Artificial Intelligence and Algorithmic Ethics
(Questions 1–15)
Question 1
An accounting firm uses an AI system to analyze journal entries for potential fraud.
The AI flags a set of entries as suspicious, but the partner overrides the AI because
"I trust the client." The partner is:
A) Exercising professional judgment appropriately
B) Potentially failing to exercise professional skepticism by blindly trusting the
,client and ignoring AI alerts
C) Required to follow AI without question
D) Violating confidentiality
Answer: B) Potentially failing to exercise professional skepticism by blindly
trusting the client and ignoring AI alerts
Rationale: AI is a tool, not a replacement for judgment. However, ignoring AI alerts
without investigation may be a failure of professional skepticism. The partner
should investigate the flagged entries, not dismiss them solely based on trust in
the client.
Question 2
Algorithmic bias in accounting AI refers to:
A) The AI processing data too quickly
B) The AI systematically producing unfair outcomes due to biased training data or
flawed algorithm design
C) The AI requiring too much computing power
D) The AI being open-source
Answer: B) The AI systematically producing unfair outcomes due to biased
training data or flawed algorithm design
Rationale: Algorithmic bias can lead to discriminatory outcomes (e.g., in credit
scoring, fraud detection, hiring). Accountants using AI must evaluate outputs for
bias and correct discriminatory patterns. Ignoring bias violates integrity and due
care.
Question 3
A CPA uses an AI tool to prepare tax returns. The AI makes an error resulting in
underpayment of tax. Who is legally responsible for the penalty?
A) The AI software developer
B) The CPA
,C) The client
D) The provider of the AI platform
Answer: B) The CPA
Rationale: Circular 230 and professional standards hold the CPA responsible for the
accuracy of tax returns they sign, regardless of the tools used. The CPA cannot
delegate responsibility to AI. The CPA may have recourse against the vendor but
remains liable to the client and IRS.
Question 4
Which of the following is an ethical concern when using AI for financial statement
audits?
A) AI may reduce audit fees
B) Over-reliance on AI without understanding its logic and limitations may violate
due care and professional skepticism
C) AI always eliminates human error
D) AI requires no oversight
Answer: B) Over-reliance on AI without understanding its logic and limitations
may violate due care and professional skepticism
Rationale: Auditors must understand the AI's logic, data sources, and limitations to
assess reliability. Blind reliance without understanding violates due care. AI is a
tool, not a replacement for professional judgment.
Question 5
Under the AICPA's Framework for Auditing with Artificial Intelligence, the auditor's
responsibility includes:
A) Understanding the AI's logic, data sources, and limitations
B) Relying fully on AI outputs without testing
C) Using AI only for non-material accounts
D) Delegating all audit procedures to AI
, Answer: A) Understanding the AI's logic, data sources, and limitations
Rationale: Auditors must have sufficient understanding of AI tools to assess their
reliability, potential biases, and whether outputs are reasonable. Blind reliance
violates due care and professional skepticism.
Question 6
A CPA firm uses AI to screen job applicants. The AI systematically rejects
candidates from certain zip codes, which are predominantly minority
neighborhoods. This is an example of:
A) Efficient hiring
B) Algorithmic bias, which may violate professional ethics and anti-discrimination
laws
C) A necessary business practice
D) Confidentiality
Answer: B) Algorithmic bias, which may violate professional ethics and anti-
discrimination laws
Rationale: Accountants using AI in HR or other functions have a duty to ensure
fairness and non-discrimination. This is part of integrity and due care. Bias must be
identified and corrected.
Question 7
The "black box" problem in AI ethics refers to:
A) The physical casing of the AI server
B) The inability to explain how an AI system arrived at a particular decision,
making accountability difficult
C) The color of the AI interface
D) A type of AI that is always accurate
Answer: B) The inability to explain how an AI system arrived at a particular
decision, making accountability difficult
Rationale: Explainability is crucial for accountability. If an AI makes a wrong