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Antimalware for azure8/29/2023 ![]() ![]() ![]() This blade will let you choose between a third party option and the Microsoft antimalware functionality and, after choosing the Microsoft solution, let you define which file extensions, locations or processes to exclude from your antimalware engine/scans. In this view you will find a button “Install on x VMs” that will open another blade to your right. This will show you a list of all VM’s in this state, in my case the only VM I currently host in Azure. In the Azure Security Center select the VM’s section and drill down on the alert on Anti-Malware not present. Since this blog covers the installation of antimalware through the Security Center, let’s put all of those difficult things aside and lets just see how to do this already… ![]() Your actual implementation of this advice depends on business-case, use and lifecycle of the VM, etc. It will advise you to install anti-malware on your VM’s in Azure. (Yes, I currently only have one -)) This was so amazingly simple I couldn’t resist to share it with you…Īfter activating the feature inside the “New” or “Ibiza” portal, it will do some inventory on your subscription and return some advice. The Azure Security Center (can we abbreviate this to MASC?) advised me to enable Network Security Groups on all of the subnets of my Virtual Network in Azure, which I did.Īnother thing it recommended me to do, was to deploy anti-malware on all of my Azure VM. Today I decided to take some of the recommendations and actually do something with them. If you want to see where all the fuss is about, during the upcoming small holidays for New Year, you can enable this preview feature here. In a recent tweet-streak I was clearly overjoyed by the announcement of the Azure Security Center being available as a Preview Feature in Azure. ![]()
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