Book Image

Microsoft Cybersecurity Architect Exam Ref SC-100

By : Dwayne Natwick
5 (1)
Book Image

Microsoft Cybersecurity Architect Exam Ref SC-100

5 (1)
By: Dwayne Natwick

Overview of this book

Microsoft Cybersecurity Architect Exam Ref SC-100 is a comprehensive guide that will help cybersecurity professionals design and evaluate the cybersecurity architecture of Microsoft cloud services. Complete with hands-on tutorials, projects, and self-assessment questions, you’ll have everything you need to pass the SC-100 exam. This book will take you through designing a strategy for a cybersecurity architecture and evaluating the governance, risk, and compliance (GRC) of the architecture. This will include cloud-only and hybrid infrastructures, where you’ll learn how to protect using the principles of zero trust, along with evaluating security operations and the overall security posture. To make sure that you are able to take the SC-100 exam with confidence, the last chapter of this book will let you test your knowledge with a mock exam and practice questions. By the end of this book, you’ll have the knowledge you need to plan, design, and evaluate cybersecurity for Microsoft cloud and hybrid infrastructures, and pass the SC-100 exam with flying colors.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
1
Part 1: The Evolution of Cybersecurity in the Cloud
3
Part 2: Designing a Zero-Trust Strategy and Architecture
7
Part 3: Evaluating Governance, Risk, and Compliance (GRC) Technical Strategies and Security Operations Strategies
10
Part 4: Designing Security for Infrastructure
13
Part 5: Designing a Strategy for Data and Applications

Designing a strategy for access to cloud resources

As we determine how access to cloud resources will be handled, let’s think about the evolution of identity and access architectures. Identity and access prior to cloud technologies were typically handled from application to application. Developers of on-premises applications would have their user database accessed from within the application. Every application would have a database of users and passwords. Windows AD user databases could be tied into these applications and could also be integrated into some of these applications. However, full single sign-on capabilities were not widely available.

As cloud technologies became available and software-as-a-service (SaaS) applications became more widely used by companies, the need to manage and govern identity and access expanded beyond the on-premises architecture. This expansion decreased the amount of control that IT departments had to protect identities and access behind network...