Iām a big fan of Intuneās device compliance policies and Azure Active Directoryās (AAD) conditional access rules. They're one piece of the puzzle in moving to a [Beyond Corp][5] model, that I believe is the future of enterprise networks.
He/Him. Microsoft MVP and GitKraken Ambassador. š Poshsecurity.com. š³āš Gay. š± Cat owner.
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Iām a big fan of Intuneās device compliance policies and Azure Active Directoryās (AAD) conditional access rules. They're one piece of the puzzle in moving to a [Beyond Corp][5] model, that I believe is the future of enterprise networks.
Unless you have been living under a rock or in a case, you have probably heard of the CPU vulnerabilities: Meltdown and Spectre. Thereās been quite a lot of media hype, you could be forgiven thinking that these are world-ending bugs. My opinion, and that of others is that this isnāt something to panic over.
Several days ago, a post titled: Microsoft Resnet - DNS Configuration Web Vulnerabilitygrabbed my interest. It has an innocuous title, and I hadnāt recalled anyone else talking about a Microsoft DNS Vulnerability. The post wasn't that long, the description and the proof-of-concept are only a few paragraphs in length; however what I did discover was an interesting vulnerability, one that, I feel, is going to become more and more prevalent with the use of Platform As A Service (PaaS) technologies like Azure App Services.