Recently Microsoft announced Microsoft Teams, a new chat-based platform in Office 365. For all mobile platforms (Android, iOS and Windows 10 Mobile) Microsoft released an native app, including a desktop app for Windows 10 and Mac OS X. The Microsoft Teams apps can be downloaded here. After I installed the Microsoft Teams desktop app on Windows 10 I bumped into the following funny message ‘Yikes! Looks like someone pulled the plug on the internet’.
Category: Enterprise Data Protection
Part 4 – Create & Deploy Windows Information Protection with Microsoft Intune
In this blog series of Windows Information Protection (WIP) I will provide you some more insights what WIP is, how it works and how to create & deploy WIP policies by Configuration Manager and Microsoft Intune.
- Part 1 – Introduction: Enterprise Data Protection – Under the hood
- Part 2 – Retrieve Desktop & Universal Application Information with PowerShell
- Part 3 – Create & Deploy Enterprise Data Protection with Configuration Manager Current Branch
- Part 4 – Create & Deploy Enterprise Data Protection with Microsoft Intune
In this 4th blog post I’ll outline how to create & deploy Windows Information Protection policies to Windows 10 devices by Microsoft Intune.
Continue reading “Part 4 – Create & Deploy Windows Information Protection with Microsoft Intune”
Part 3 – Create & deploy Enterprise Data Protection using System Center Configuration Manager Current Branch
In this blog series of Enterprise Data Protection (EDP) I will provide you some more insights what EDP is, how it works and how to create & deploy EDP policies by Configuration Manager and Microsoft Intune.
- Part 1 – Introduction: Enterprise Data Protection – Under the hood
- Part 2 – Retrieve Desktop & Universal Application Information with PowerShell
- Part 3 – Create & Deploy Enterprise Data Protection with Configuration Manager Current Branch
- Part 4 – Create & Deploy Enterprise Data Protection with Microsoft Intune
- Part 5 – Enterprise Data Protection & Azure RMS better together
In this 3rd blog post I’ll outline how to create & deploy Enterprise Data Protection policies by Configuration Manager Current Branch (1511) to Windows 10 devices.
Part 2 – Define Privileged Desktop & Universal Applications for Enterprise Data Protection
My very first challenge – which was in my modest opinion the hardest part – with Enterprise Data Protection (EDP) was defining protected applications in a correct way. Many of you including myself were struggling how to define restricted applications.
In a serie blog posts I will provide some guidance how EDP works and how to configure protected apps, Configuration Manager and Microsoft Intune.
- Part 1 – Introduction: Enterprise Data Protection – Under the hood
- Part 2 – Retrieve Desktop & Universal Application Information with PowerShell
- Part 3 – Create & Deploy Enterprise Data Protection with System Center Configuration Manager Current Branch (1511)
- Part 4 – Create & Deploy Enterprise Data Protection with Microsoft Intune
- Part 5 – Enterprise Data Protection & Azure RMS better together
In this blog I’ll explain how you can retrieve the mandatory information required in order to define protected applications for your Enterprise Data Protection policies.
Blog series: Protect your Company Data using Enterprise Data Protection (EDP)
Recently I had the chance during a technical Friday jam session to play around with Enterprise Data Protection (EDP) with some other geeks .
In short Enterprise data protection (EDP) helps to protect against potential data loss without interfering end-user experience. EDP also helps to protect enterprise apps & data against accidental data loss on enterprise-owned devices, including personal devices that end-users bring to work without requiring changes to your environment or other apps.
Although EDP is introduced with Windows 10 release, the underlying technologies are common known. EDP is primary relying on Encrypted File System (EFS) and AppLocker. In a serie blog posts I will provid some guidance how EDP works and how to configure protected apps, Configuration Manager and Microsoft Intune.
- Part 1 – Introduction: Enterprise Data Protection – Under the hood
- Part 2 – Retrieve Desktop & Universal Application Information with PowerShell
- Part 3 – Create & Deploy Enterprise Data Protection with System Center Configuration Manager Current Branch (1511)
- Part 4 – Create & Deploy Enterprise Data Protection with Microsoft Intune
- Part 5 – Enterprise Data Protection & Azure RMS better together
Note!
Enterprise data protection is currently being tested with a number of enterprise customers, and will become available to Windows Insiders soon.
Stay tuned!