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Microsoft Defender for Endpoint in Depth

You're reading from   Microsoft Defender for Endpoint in Depth Take any organization's endpoint security to the next level

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781804615461
Length 362 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (3):
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Justen Graves Justen Graves
Author Profile Icon Justen Graves
Justen Graves
Joe Anich Joe Anich
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Joe Anich
Paul Huijbregts Paul Huijbregts
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Paul Huijbregts
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Toc

Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: Unpacking Microsoft Defender for Endpoint
2. Chapter 1: A Brief History of Microsoft Defender for Endpoint FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Exploring Next-Generation Protection 4. Chapter 3: Introduction to Attack Surface Reduction 5. Chapter 4: Understanding Endpoint Detection and Response 6. Part 2: Operationalizing and Integrating the Products
7. Chapter 5: Planning and Preparing for Deployment 8. Chapter 6: Considerations for Deployment and Configuration 9. Chapter 7: Managing and Maintaining the Security Posture 10. Part 3: Operations and Troubleshooting
11. Chapter 8: Establishing Security Operations 12. Chapter 9: Troubleshooting Common Issues 13. Chapter 10: Reference Guide, Tips, and Tricks 14. Index 15. Other Books You May Enjoy

Understanding your update sources

When you don’t want, for example, your Windows servers getting Defender security intelligence updates directly from Windows Update, because you want to be more in control, here’s how you can find out where updates are coming from:

  1. Check the logs. If you see an entry in any of the logs collected by mpcdmrun -getfiles (MpCmdRun.log, MpCmdRun-LocalService.log, MpCmdRun-NetworkService.log, and MpCmdRun-System.log), you know that updates are coming from ConfigMgr Windows Server Update Services (WSUS), WSUS standalone, the MMPC, or a file share.
  2. If you’ve configured a policy to check for security intelligence updates at a specific interval, check the Windows Defender Operational event log. If you see that a security intelligence update is being applied, while none of the logs from step 1 show as downloading the file, you can probably conclude the update is coming from Microsoft Update directly.
  3. To confirm, open WindowsUpdate...
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