Book Image

Mastering Windows Security and Hardening - Second Edition

By : Mark Dunkerley, Matt Tumbarello
5 (1)
Book Image

Mastering Windows Security and Hardening - Second Edition

5 (1)
By: Mark Dunkerley, Matt Tumbarello

Overview of this book

Are you looking for the most current and effective ways to protect Windows-based systems from being compromised by intruders? This updated second edition is a detailed guide that helps you gain the expertise to implement efficient security measures and create robust defense solutions using modern technologies. The first part of the book covers security fundamentals with details around building and implementing baseline controls. As you advance, you’ll learn how to effectively secure and harden your Windows-based systems through hardware, virtualization, networking, and identity and access management (IAM). The second section will cover administering security controls for Windows clients and servers with remote policy management using Intune, Configuration Manager, Group Policy, Defender for Endpoint, and other Microsoft 365 and Azure cloud security technologies. In the last section, you’ll discover how to protect, detect, and respond with security monitoring, reporting, operations, testing, and auditing. By the end of this book, you’ll have developed an understanding of the processes and tools involved in enforcing security controls and implementing zero-trust security principles to protect Windows systems.
Table of Contents (21 chapters)
1
Part 1: Getting Started and Fundamentals
7
Part 2: Applying Security and Hardening
15
Part 3: Protecting, Detecting, and Responding for Windows Environments

Chapter 15: Testing and Auditing

In this chapter, we will provide details about testing and auditing your environment, which will help validate controls and ensure due diligence has been executed within your security program. The challenge we face when deploying security controls, hardening configurations, and security baselines, is validating that they are in place and working as designed. The security department may have obligations to the leadership team, board stakeholders, shareholders, and regulators to prove that you have implemented the appropriate recommended controls depending on your business or industry. This is where testing and auditing comes into play by helping provide evidence that controls are in place. These activities can be performed internally or through a third-party company for added benefit. We test to ensure that our controls are doing what they are designed to do. Without testing, we fail to validate whether the controls work, and can't truly understand...