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Mastering Windows Security and Hardening

You're reading from   Mastering Windows Security and Hardening Secure and protect your Windows environment from intruders, malware attacks, and other cyber threats

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781839216411
Length 572 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Concepts
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Authors (2):
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Matt Tumbarello Matt Tumbarello
Author Profile Icon Matt Tumbarello
Matt Tumbarello
Mark Dunkerley Mark Dunkerley
Author Profile Icon Mark Dunkerley
Mark Dunkerley
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Toc

Table of Contents (19) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Getting Started
2. Chapter 1: Fundamentals of Windows Security FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Building a Baseline 4. Chapter 3: Server Infrastructure Management 5. Chapter 4: End User Device Management 6. Section 2: Applying Security and Hardening
7. Chapter 5: Hardware and Virtualization 8. Chapter 6: Network Fundamentals for Hardening Windows 9. Chapter 7: Identity and Access Management 10. Chapter 8: Administration and Remote Management 11. Chapter 9: Keeping Your Windows Client Secure 12. Chapter 10: Keeping Your Windows Server Secure 13. Section 3: Protecting, Detecting, and Responding for Windows Environments
14. Chapter 11: Security Monitoring and Reporting 15. Chapter 12: Security Operations 16. Chapter 13: Testing and Auditing 17. Chapter 14: Top 10 Recommendations and the Future 18. Other Books You May Enjoy

Chapter 13: Testing and Auditing

In this chapter, we will provide the details around testing and auditing your environment that will help validate and ensure that due diligence has been executed within your security program. The challenge we face when deploying recommendations, hardening, and baselines is proving that they are in place and doing what they are designed to do. The IT department as a program may have obligations to leadership, board stakeholders, shareholders, and regulators to prove that you have implemented the recommended controls depending on your business or industry. Helping with providing evidence is where testing and auditing comes into play. To prove that controls are in place is why we audit, and it is even better to have a third-party company execute the audit. 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.

The first section we will cover in this chapter is validating...

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