: Transition File Blocking Profiles Safely to Best Practices
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Transition File Blocking Profiles Safely to Best Practices

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Transition File Blocking Profiles Safely to Best Practices

Apply File Blocking profiles to allow rules to protect against risky file types used in malware campaigns without risking application availability.
The following guidance helps determine whether to start with block or alert actions as you define the initial File Blocking profiles and begin the transition to best practice profiles. Alert instead of allowing file types to generate logs and gain visibility into the traffic.
  • Best practices File Blocking profiles are often different for different types of applications and might be different for inbound, outbound, and internal traffic. For example:
    • If internal applications depend on file type transfers that the best practice File Blocking profile recommends blocking, allow those file types for those internal applications; .dll files are a good example. Allow those file transfer types only for the necessary internal applications, not for all applications.
    • For internet-based traffic, take a more restrictive approach to prevent attackers from delivering malicious files and to reduce the attack surface.
    • For data center traffic, take a more restrictive approach (except for internal applications that depend on file transfer types that you would otherwise block) to reduce the attack surface and protect your most valuable assets.
    • When you carve out exceptions, follow the principle of least privilege and apply the exceptions only to the applications and users and that need access to the file type for business purposes.
  • Business-critical applications
    —Start with the alert action for all file types and move to best practices File Blocking profiles as soon as possible. If you already have blocking controls in place, replicate them and continue to block traffic that you already know you want to block.
  • For applications that aren't business-critical, start the transition to a best practices File Blocking profile:
    • Inbound and outbound traffic
      —Set the
      Action
      to
      block
      for 7z, bat, chm, class, cpl, dll, dlp, hta, jar, ocx, pif, scr, torrent, vbe, and wsf files. Set the
      Action
      to
      alert
      for all other files.
    • Internal traffic
      —Block 7z, bat, chm, class, cpl, dlp, hta, jar, ocx, pif, scr, torrent, vbe, and wsf files (this is the same as the inbound/outbound profile except it alerts on .dll files instead of blocking them). Alert on all other files.
    • Block all of the following file types you can for users who don’t need them for business purposes: cab, exe, flash, msi, Multi-Level-Encoding, PE, rar, tar, encrypted-rar, and encrypted-zip.
If necessary, create exceptions for IT groups and others who need legitimate business access to any of these file types. If you already block any other file types, continue to block them.
Transition to a best practices File Blocking profile as quickly as you are comfortable with doing so.
Fine-tune profile rules that alert and transition them to blocking as soon as you comfortably can, especially for internet-facing and data center traffic. Monitor the Data Filtering logs (
Monitor
Logs
Data Filtering
) to understand file type usage before configuring block actions for specific file types. As you learn which file types your business-critical and internal custom applications require, transition toward a best practice File Blocking configuration, modified as necessary to support your business needs.

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