A cable run under a carpet is vulnerable to compression, bending, and repeated physical stress from foot traffic, which can damage the cable jacket, distort the twists, loosen terminations, or partially break conductors—often showing up as intermittent connectivity . Quentin Docter notes that on a wired network, “other wired issues can include bad or poorly connected cables,” and you should check cabling and connections as a cause of intermittent problems. Putting a cable where people walk on it increases the chance it becomes “bad” over time or develops poor connections, producing the intermittent symptoms described in the answer option.
From a safety/professional practice perspective, Mike Meyers emphasizes that unmanaged cables are “dangerous tripping hazards” and that in business environments cables should be “carefully tucked away… or placed under cable runners,” using “proper cable management.” While that supports hazard reduction, the best reason in this question’s choices focuses on network reliability: repeated walking over the cable can cause intermittent issues. So the correct answer is D.