Upgrade & Secure Your Future with DevOps, SRE, DevSecOps, MLOps!
We spend hours on Instagram and YouTube and waste money on coffee and fast food, but wonβt spend 30 minutes a day learning skills to boost our careers.
Master in DevOps, SRE, DevSecOps & MLOps!
Learn from Guru Rajesh Kumar and double your salary in just one year.
Source:-https://redmondmag.com/
Microsoft this week described a few security products that have reached βgeneral availabilityβ (GA) or commercial-release status, while also touting its overall security-market position.
Reaching GA are some Azure Security Center capabilities, Azure Defender for IoT and Application Guard for Office. These releases were announced on Wednesday. On Tuesday, Microsoftβs security-business prowess was highlighted in the companyβs fiscal-year 2021 Q2 earning report given by Satya Nadella, Microsoftβs CEO. He noted that Microsoftβs security solutions revenue recently surpassed $10 billion.
A transcript was needed since a near-eight-minute gap occurred during the Tuesday presentation.
Microsoftβs $10 billion security revenue figure was enough for researchers at analyst and consulting firm Forrester to declare that βMicrosoft is now a cybersecurity behemoth.β
Security Stats
Microsoft security stats were touted in a Wednesday announcement by Vasu Jakkal, Microsoftβs corporate vice president for security, compliance and identity. She offered the following security highlights:
Microsoft Defender blocked βalmost six billion malware threatsβ in 2020.
Microsoft Defender for Office 365 blocked βmore than 30 billion email threatsβ in 2020.
Azure Active Directory processes βmore than 30 billion authenticationsβ per day.
Azure Sentinel βanalyzes over 4 petabytes of data each month.β
Microsoft solutions are protecting βmore than 400,000 customers across 120 countries.β
Jakkal suggested that no other software company was handing βsecurity, compliance, identity, and management as an interdependent whole.β
βMicrosoftβs security organization is an intense, massive collaboration that drives services, intelligence, technologies, and people β all coming together as one humming machine with a singular mission,β she added.
Application Guard for Office GA
Application Guard for Office is Microsoftβs more improved approach for dealing with malicious files found on Web sites and in e-mail attachments. The product reached GA status, Microsoft announced on Wednesday. It had been at the preview stage back in August.
Microsoft has long had a Protected View security mechanism that mainly just acts as a precaution when users attempt to open documents attached in e-mails. Protected View permits end users to turn on editing in the documents, which can also enable attacks. With Application Guard for Office, these files get opened in a virtual machine βsandboxβ environment, namely a βHyper-V-enabled container,β which is isolated and prevents any malware from spreading into systems.
Despite the productβs name, Application Guard for Office is just for subscribers to the Office 365 service. Additionally, organizations can only get Application Guard for Office when they subscribe to E5-type plans, a top pricing option. Microsoftβs announcement also noted that βApplication Guard works in conjunction with Microsoft Defender for Office 365,β a security solution thatβs part of the newly renamed Microsoft Defender product line. Other security components in Microsoft Defender for Office 365 include βSafe Attachments, Safe Links, and Safe Documents,β the announcement explained.
Microsoftβs announcement affirmed that Application Guard for Office wonβt be turned on by default for licensees:
Azure Security Center Enhancements
The Azure Security Center portal now has multicloud management capabilities, with the ability to work with Amazon Web Services (AWS) and Google Cloud Platform (GCP) reaching GA status, Microsoft announced on Wednesday.
It seems that just some capabilities are at GA in Azure Security Center, though. Microsoft specifically pointed to the ability to show AWS and GCP misconfigurations in its βSecure Score Model and Regulatory Complianceβ features as being available.
Microsoft additionally turned on βAzure Security Benchmark as the default security policy for Azure Security Center,β which is conceived as bolstering its recommended policy settings.
Also at GA is the ability to use Azure Defender for Servers with Microsoftβs Azure Arc product to βsimplify the on-boarding and security of virtual machines running in AWS, GCP and hybrid clouds.β Azure Arc is Microsoftβs multicloud management portal that also supports on-premises implementations, per a Microsoft βOverviewβ document. Azure Defender for Servers appears to be a component of the Microsoft Defender for Endpoint security solution. Itβs tersely described in this Microsoft document as adding βthreat detection and advanced defenses for your Windows and Linux machines.β
In response to customer feedback, Microsoft now lets organizations βexempt resourcesβ from Secure Score βat a subscription level and now at a management group level.β Secure Score is Microsoftβs security assessment service. Some organizations apparently requested this exemption because they are using βthird-party technologyβ (non-Microsoft solutions) for their security-posture assessments.
Azure Defender for IoT GA
Microsoft also announced on Wednesday that Azure Defender for IoT, its agentless security solution for unmanaged βInternet of thingsβ devices and so-called βoperational technology endpoints,β has reached GA status. It had been at the public preview stage back in October. The solution is designed to work with devices that use βspecialized industrial protocols such as Modbus, DNP3, and BACnet.β
Azure Defender for IoT works with Microsoft recently acquired CyberX technologies to discover devices, find vulnerabilities and perform continuous device monitoring. Governance details are handled, too, when the service is used with a security information and event management solution, such as Microsoftβs Azure Sentinel. It also works with βSplunk, IBM QRadar and ServiceNowβ solutions.
Azure Defender for IoT can be used on a customerβs site, or it can be tapped as an Azure service. The latter approach lets organizations connect Azure Defender for IoT with Microsoftβs Azure Defender security services. Alternatively, thereβs a βhybridβ deployment possibility, βwhere security monitoring is performed on-premises but selected alerts are forwarded to a cloud-based SIEM like Azure Sentinel,β the announcement explained.