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Microsoft Intune Cookbook

You're reading from   Microsoft Intune Cookbook Over 75 recipes for configuring, managing, and automating your identities, apps, and endpoint devices

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781805126546
Length 574 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Andrew Taylor Andrew Taylor
Author Profile Icon Andrew Taylor
Andrew Taylor
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Toc

Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Chapter 1: Getting Started with Microsoft Intune FREE CHAPTER 2. Chapter 2: Configuring Your New Tenant for Windows Devices 3. Chapter 3: Securing Your Windows Devices with Security Policies 4. Chapter 4: Setting Up Enrollment and Updates for Windows 5. Chapter 5: Android Device Management 6. Chapter 6: iOS Device Management 7. Chapter 7: macOS Device Management 8. Chapter 8: Setting Up Your Compliance Policies 9. Chapter 9: Monitoring Your New Environment 10. Chapter 10: Looking at Reporting 11. Chapter 11: Packaging Your Windows Applications 12. Chapter 12: PowerShell Scripting across Intune 13. Chapter 13: Tenant Administration 14. Chapter 14: Looking at Intune Suite 15. Index 16. Other Books You May Enjoy

Adding an app protection policy

We have now configured policies for our corporate-owned devices to keep them secured and managed, but what about devices owned by users who want to access their email and other corporate apps on their personal devices? One option is to block this completely, but for most, that is not ideal, and we will just end up with a much larger list of corporate devices to purchase and manage.

Another option is to do nothing and let them add the apps completely unmanaged, but from a data protection perspective, this is a security concern as you have no control over your corporate data.

For this, we can use app protection policies and enroll devices into Mobile Application Management (MAM) instead of Mobile Device Management (MDM). Both can be used for additional security, but this would be unusual as it will add extra steps for the users on their devices, and we can assume a managed device is secure at the device layer. We do not want users fully enrolling...

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