Book Image

Mastering Active Directory, Third Edition - Third Edition

By : Dishan Francis
5 (2)
Book Image

Mastering Active Directory, Third Edition - Third Edition

5 (2)
By: Dishan Francis

Overview of this book

Mastering Active Directory, Third Edition is a comprehensive guide for Information Technology professionals looking to improve their knowledge about MS Windows Active Directory Domain Service. The book will help you to use identity elements effectively and manage your organization’s infrastructure in a secure and efficient way. This third edition has been fully updated to reflect the importance of cloud-based strong authentication and other tactics to protect identity infrastructure from emerging security threats. Mastering Active Directory, Third Edition provides extensive coverage of AD Domain Services and helps you explore their capabilities as you update to Windows Server 2022. This book will also teach you how to extend on-premises identity presence to cloud via Azure AD hybrid setup. By the end of this Microsoft Active Directory book, you’ll feel confident in your ability to design, plan, deploy, protect, and troubleshoot your enterprise identity infrastructure.
Table of Contents (22 chapters)
20
Other Books You May Enjoy
21
Index

Active Directory Rights Management Services

Following the invention of the computer, people started to transform analog data into digital formats. It also transformed the way that people accessed data. If someone is in possession of valuable documents, they can put them in a safe, or in any other secure place. In order to access this valuable data, someone needs to physically be there. Digital data is completely different. Even without physically being there, someone could steal valuable data from a computer infrastructure. This is why data security and data governance are so important when it comes to digital data. When the wrong people have access to the wrong data, the consequences can have an impact on people, organizations, or even countries.

The famous WikiLeaks phenomenon is a good example of this. WikiLeaks got access to state secrets, and some of that data was in digital format, such as emails and scanned files. Someone with authority over that data had passed it to WikiLeaks...