By Tulasi Nakka
Introduction
In today’s increasingly complex digital landscape, organizations must adopt security measures to safeguard their systems and data. Device configuration policies play a pivotal role in maintaining secure and compliant environments, particularly by setting baseline configurations for endpoints such as Windows and iOS devices. These policies ensure that security configurations, such as antivirus scanning, attack surface reduction (ASR) rules, and system update controls, are consistently applied across all organizational devices.
What Are Device Configurations and Why Are They Important?
Device configurations are predefined policies and settings applied to devices to ensure they adhere to security and compliance standards set by the organization. These settings manage critical security features like firewalls, encryption, antivirus, and more, establishing a uniform security posture across all devices within a network.
Device configuration policies help organizations safeguard against vulnerabilities by ensuring every device meets baseline security requirements, no matter where or how it’s used.
Guard+ has already given you the ability to
- see which devices are compliant or not.
This new feature completes the picture by allowing you to understand device-specific policy configurations and real-time security status. Now, you can easily view detailed policy assignments, their compliance status, and any potential security risks at a granular level.
Below, we showcase how Guard+ enhances the user experience in tracking the device configurations set to your devices.
Guard+ View
Guard+ provides the key metrics from the Installed Software across devices,
- Display Name and Description– Identifies the policy name and its description.
- Settings Definition Id and Settings Value – Indicates the settings being applied to each policy.
- Policy Type – refers to the specific category or function of the policy being applied. It describes what the policy is designed to control or enforce on the devices within the organization.
- Template Family – refers to the group or collection of settings that the policy belongs to.
- Group Name – refers to the specific group or set of users/devices to which the policy is applied.
- Target – specifies the actual scope or entity that the policy is being applied to.