IV.3. We’ve been hacked. Exercise IV.1 concerns a random sample of 1017 adults. Suppose that (unknown to the pollsters) exactly 25% of all adults had information from a credit card used at a store by themselves or another household member stolen by computer hackers in the year prior to October 2014. Imagine that we take very many SRSs of size 1017 from this population and record the percentage in each sample who claim to have had information from a credit card used at a store by themselves or another household member stolen by computer hackers in the year prior to October 2014. Where would the middle 95% of all values of this percentage lie? (Hint: See pages 495–497.)