compliance controls are associated with this Policy definition '[Deprecated]: Virtual machines should encrypt temp disks, caches, and data flows between Compute and Storage resources' (0961003e-5a0a-4549-abde-af6a37f2724d)
Control Domain |
Control |
Name |
MetadataId |
Category |
Title |
Owner |
Requirements |
Description |
Info |
Policy# |
Azure_Security_Benchmark_v1.0 |
4.8 |
Azure_Security_Benchmark_v1.0_4.8 |
Azure Security Benchmark 4.8 |
Data Protection |
Encrypt sensitive information at rest |
Customer |
Use encryption at rest on all Azure resources. Microsoft recommends allowing Azure to manage your encryption keys, however there is the option for you to manage your own keys in some instances.
Understand encryption at rest in Azure:
https://docs.microsoft.com/azure/security/fundamentals/encryption-atrest
How to configure customer managed encryption keys:
https://docs.microsoft.com/azure/storage/common/storage-encryption-keys-portal |
n/a |
link |
7 |
Azure_Security_Benchmark_v2.0 |
DP-2 |
Azure_Security_Benchmark_v2.0_DP-2 |
Azure Security Benchmark DP-2 |
Data Protection |
Protect sensitive data |
Shared |
Protect sensitive data by restricting access using Azure Role Based Access Control (Azure RBAC), network-based access controls, and specific controls in Azure services (such as encryption in SQL and other databases).
To ensure consistent access control, all types of access control should be aligned to your enterprise segmentation strategy. The enterprise segmentation strategy should also be informed by the location of sensitive or business critical data and systems.
For the underlying platform, which is managed by Microsoft, Microsoft treats all customer content as sensitive and guards against customer data loss and exposure. To ensure customer data within Azure remains secure, Microsoft has implemented some default data protection controls and capabilities.
Azure Role Based Access Control (RBAC): https://docs.microsoft.com/azure/role-based-access-control/overview
Understand customer data protection in Azure: https://docs.microsoft.com/azure/security/fundamentals/protection-customer-data |
n/a |
link |
6 |
Azure_Security_Benchmark_v2.0 |
DP-5 |
Azure_Security_Benchmark_v2.0_DP-5 |
Azure Security Benchmark DP-5 |
Data Protection |
Encrypt sensitive data at rest |
Shared |
To complement access controls, data at rest should be protected against ‘out of band’ attacks (such as accessing underlying storage) using encryption. This helps ensure that attackers cannot easily read or modify the data.
Azure provides encryption for data at rest by default. For highly sensitive data, you have options to implement additional encryption at rest on all Azure resources where available. Azure manages your encryption keys by default, but Azure provides options to manage your own keys (customer managed keys) for certain Azure services.
Understand encryption at rest in Azure: https://docs.microsoft.com/azure/security/fundamentals/encryption-atrest#encryption-at-rest-in-microsoft-cloud-services
How to configure customer managed encryption keys: https://docs.microsoft.com/azure/storage/common/storage-encryption-keys-portal
Encryption model and key management table: https://docs.microsoft.com/azure/security/fundamentals/encryption-models
Data at rest double encryption in Azure: https://docs.microsoft.com/azure/security/fundamentals/double-encryption#data-at-rest |
n/a |
link |
13 |
|
mp.com.3 Protection of integrity and authenticity |
mp.com.3 Protection of integrity and authenticity |
404 not found |
|
|
|
n/a |
n/a |
|
62 |
NZ_ISM_v3.5 |
CR-3 |
NZ_ISM_v3.5_CR-3 |
NZISM Security Benchmark CR-3 |
Cryptography |
17.1.53 Reducing storage and physical transfer requirements |
Customer |
n/a |
When encryption is applied to media or media residing within IT equipment it provides an additional layer of defence. Whilst such measures do not reduce or alter the classification of the information itself, physical storage, handling and transfer requirements may be reduced to those of a lesser classification for the media or equipment (but not the data itself). |
link |
12 |
NZISM_Security_Benchmark_v1.1 |
CR-3 |
NZISM_Security_Benchmark_v1.1_CR-3 |
NZISM Security Benchmark CR-3 |
Cryptography |
17.1.46 Reducing storage and physical transfer requirements |
Customer |
If an agency wishes to use encryption to reduce the storage or physical transfer requirements for IT equipment or media that contains classified information, they SHOULD use:
full disk encryption; or
partial disk encryption where the access control will only allow writing to the encrypted partition holding the classified information. |
When encryption is applied to media or media residing within IT equipment it provides an additional layer of defence. Whilst such measures do not reduce or alter the classification of the information itself, physical storage, handling and transfer requirements may be reduced to those of a lesser classification for the media or equipment (but not the data itself). |
link |
11 |
|
op.acc.6 Authentication mechanism (organization users) |
op.acc.6 Authentication mechanism (organization users) |
404 not found |
|
|
|
n/a |
n/a |
|
78 |