Expanding coverage
At first, partner integrations were the only way to extend coverage to non-Windows operating systems (macOS, Linux, and mobile). These partner integrations leveraged a cloud-to-cloud connection where telemetry was forwarded so that a machine page could be created.
Due to market demand and the evolving threat landscape, in the fall of 2018, Microsoft started working on a new security product for macOS. Microsoft rapidly developed a solution with initially only antimalware capabilities delivered by an off-the-shelf engine (augmented with RTP, manageability, quarantine, and a user interface) and made it generally available in June 2019; later that year, EDR was added to the feature set.
Following the successful release of MDE on macOS, the focus switched to Linux. The general availability of Microsoft Defender ATP for Linux was announced in June 2020. As with macOS, it initially only contained antimalware functionality, with EDR capabilities following later in the same year. Next up were Android and iOS, both released in 2020.
At the same time, work continued to develop a newer, more enhanced engine that was more capable of evolving along with the threat landscape. This not only provides more efficient protection delivered by significant optimization, but it is also very similar to the Windows antimalware engine, allowing developers and researchers to cross-develop for all platforms at the same time; a shared core set of security intelligence automatically provides Windows malware coverage on Linux and macOS. The similarities are no coincidence: as you can read at the start of the chapter, the original team built security solutions primarily for Linux.