View Misconfigured Settings Detected by SSPM
Table of Contents
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- Allowed List of IP Addresses
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- Begin Scanning a Bitbucket App
- Begin Scanning a Box App
- Begin Scanning ChatGPT Enterprise App
- Begin Scanning a Cisco Webex Teams App
- Begin Scanning a Confluence App
- Begin Scanning a Confluence Data Center App
- Begin Scanning a Dropbox App
- Begin Scanning a GitHub App
- Begin Scanning a Gmail App
- Begin Scanning a Google Drive App
- Begin Scanning a Jira App
- Begin Scanning a Jira Data Center App
- Begin Scanning a Microsoft Exchange App
- Begin Scanning Office 365 Apps
- Begin Scanning a Microsoft Teams App
- Begin Scanning a Salesforce App
- Begin Scanning a ServiceNow App
- Begin Scanning a ShareFile App
- Begin Scanning a Slack Enterprise App
- Begin Scanning a Slack for Pro and Business App
- Begin Scanning a Workday App (Beta)
- Begin Scanning a Zendesk App
- Begin Scanning a Zoom App
- Reauthenticate to a Cloud App
- Verify Permissions on Cloud Apps
- Start Scanning a Cloud App
- Rescan a Managed Cloud App
- Delete Cloud Apps Managed by Data Security
- API Throttling
- Configure Classification Labels
- Microsoft Labeling for Office 365
- Google Drive Labeling
- Configure Phishing Analysis
- Configure WildFire Analysis
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- What is an Incident?
- Assess New Incidents on Data Security
- Filter Incidents
- Configure Slack Notification Alerts on Data Security
- Security Controls Incident Details
- Track Down Threats with WildFire Report
- Customize the Incident Categories
- Close Incidents
- Download Assets for Incidents
- View Asset Snippets for Incidents
- Analyze Inherited Exposure
- Email Asset Owners
- Modify Incident Status
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- What’s SaaS Security Inline?
- Navigate To SaaS Security Inline
- SaaS Visibility for NGFW
- SaaS Visibility and Controls for NGFW
- SaaS Visibility for Prisma Access
- SaaS Visibility and Controls for Panorama Managed Prisma Access
- SaaS Visibility and Controls for Cloud Managed Prisma Access
- Activate SaaS Security Inline for NGFW
- Activate SaaS Security Inline for VM-Series Firewalls with Software NGFW Credits
- Activate SaaS Security Inline for Prisma Access
- Connect SaaS Security Inline and Strata Logging Service
- Integrate with Azure Active Directory
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- SaaS Policy Rule Recommendations
- App-ID Cloud Engine
- Guidelines for SaaS Policy Rule Recommendations
- Predefined SaaS Policy Rule Recommendations
- Apply Predefined SaaS Policy Rule Recommendations
- Create SaaS Policy Rule Recommendations
- Delete SaaS Policy Rule Recommendations
- Enable SaaS Policy Rule Recommendations
- Modify Active SaaS Policy Rule Recommendations
- Monitor SaaS Policy Rule Recommendations
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- Enable Automatic Updates for SaaS Policy Rule Recommendations on Cloud Managed Prisma Access
- Import New SaaS Policy Rule Recommendations on Cloud Managed Prisma Access
- Update Imported SaaS Policy Rule Recommendations on Cloud Managed Prisma Access
- Remove Deleted SaaS Policy Rule Recommendations on Cloud Managed Prisma Access
- Manage Enforcement of Rule Recommendations on NGFW
- Manage Enforcement of Rule Recommendations on Panorama Managed Prisma Access
- Change Risk Score for Discovered SaaS Apps
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- Onboarding Overview for Supported SaaS Apps
- Onboard an Aha.io App to SSPM
- Onboard an Alteryx Designer Cloud App to SSPM
- Onboard an Aptible App to SSPM
- Onboard an ArcGIS App to SSPM
- Onboard an Articulate Global App to SSPM
- Onboard an Atlassian App to SSPM
- Onboard a BambooHR App to SSPM
- Onboard a Basecamp App to SSPM
- Onboard a Bitbucket App to SSPM
- Onboard a BlueJeans App to SSPM
- Onboard a Box App to SSPM
- Onboard a Bright Security App to SSPM
- Onboard a Celonis App to SSPM
- Onboard a Cisco Meraki App to SSPM
- Onboard a ClickUp App to SSPM
- Onboard a Confluence App to SSPM
- Onboard a Contentful App to SSPM
- Onboard a Convo App to SSPM
- Onboard a Couchbase App to SSPM
- Onboard a Coveo App to SSPM
- Onboard a Crowdin Enterprise App to SSPM
- Onboard a Customer.io App to SSPM
- Onboard a Databricks App to SSPM
- Onboard a Datadog App to SSPM
- Onboard a DocHub App to SSPM
- Onboard a DocuSign App to SSPM
- Onboard an Envoy App to SSPM
- Onboard an Expiration Reminder App to SSPM
- Onboard a Gainsight PX App to SSPM
- Onboard a GitHub Enterprise App to SSPM
- Onboard a GitLab App to SSPM
- Onboard a Google Analytics App to SSPM
- Onboard a Google Workspace App to SSPM
- Onboard a GoTo Meeting App to SSPM
- Onboard a Grammarly App to SSPM
- Onboard a Harness App to SSPM
- Onboard a Hellonext App to SSPM
- Onboard an IDrive App to SSPM
- Onboard an Intercom App to SSPM
- Onboard a Jira App to SSPM
- Onboard a Kanbanize App to SSPM
- Onboard a Kanban Tool App to SSPM
- Onboard a Kustomer App to SSPM
- Onboard a Lokalise App to SSPM
- Onboard a Microsoft Azure AD App to SSPM
- Onboard a Microsoft Outlook App to SSPM
- Onboard a Microsoft Power BI App to SSPM
- Onboard a Miro App to SSPM
- Onboard a monday.com App to SSPM
- Onboard a MongoDB Atlas App to SSPM
- Onboard a MuleSoft App to SSPM
- Onboard a Mural App to SSPM
- Onboard an Office 365 App to SSPM
- Onboard an Okta App to SSPM
- Onboard a PagerDuty App to SSPM
- Onboard a RingCentral App to SSPM
- Onboard a Salesforce App to SSPM
- Onboard an SAP Ariba App to SSPM
- Onboard a ServiceNow App to SSPM
- Onboard a Slack Enterprise App to SSPM
- Onboard a Snowflake App to SSPM
- Onboard a SparkPost App to SSPM
- Onboard a Tableau Cloud App to SSPM
- Onboard a Webex App to SSPM
- Onboard a Workday App to SSPM
- Onboard a Wrike App to SSPM
- Onboard a YouTrack App to SSPM
- Onboard a Zendesk App to SSPM
- Onboard a Zoom App to SSPM
- Onboarding an App Using Azure AD Credentials
- Onboarding an App Using Okta Credentials
- Register an Azure AD Client Application
- View the Health Status of Application Scans
- Delete SaaS Apps Managed by SSPM
View Misconfigured Settings Detected by SSPM
You can view misconfigured settings through built-in SSPM rules, or through policies that
you define.
SSPM updated its terminology related to policies in July
2024. Previously, the term policy referred to a built-in recommendation
for securing SaaS applications. Each policy was a grouping of similar settings,
related to the recommendation, across all applications. What was previously called a
policy in SSPM is now called a rule. The purpose and
behavior of rules are the same as when they were called policies; only the name has
changed.
The term policy now refers to an administrator-defined
grouping of SaaS application instance settings for SSPM to monitor.
From the Security Configurations view in SSPM, you can quickly identify misconfigured
settings in your SaaS applications. You can then navigate to details about a
misconfigured setting to remediate the problem.
SSPM has built-in rules for alerting you to misconfigured settings
across all SaaS applications that were onboarded to SSPM. You can also define
policies, which alert you to misconfigured settings for a group of
application instances and settings that you specify.
Rules — Rules are predefined groupings of similar settings across SaaS
applications. Each rule describes a security best practice. For each SaaS
application that SSPM supports, SSPM maps the SaaS application's settings to the
related SSPM rules.
For example, SSPM defines a rule that recommends that MFA is implemented to
prevent attackers from using stolen credentials to access sensitive SaaS
apps. For Dropbox, the setting Two-step verification maps to this
rule. For Office 365, the settings that map to this rule include Enable policy to
block legacy authentication, Require MFA for all users, and
Require MFA for administrative roles. When SSPM detects that an
application setting is misconfigured, it triggers a violation for the setting. On
the Security Configurations view, SSPM changes the associated rule's status to
Failed. A daily digest email that SSPM sends to the application owner
also includes information about failed rules.
Policies — Like rules, policies are associated with SaaS application settings.
The difference is that policies are not predefined by SSPM. Instead, you create policies to monitor specific settings for specific
application instances. This capability helps you to concentrate your
attention on the applications and settings that are most critical to your
organization. When SSPM detects a new violation status for any of the settings that
the policy is tracking, SSPM changes the policy's status to Failed. A daily
digest email that SSPM sends to the application owner also includes information
about failed policies.
For example, for the subset of applications that are most critical to your
organization, enforcing multi-factor authentication (MFA) and limiting session
length might be of primary importance to you. In this case, you could create a
policy that monitors only these critical applications and only the settings related
to MFA and session duration. If SSPM detects a new violation in these settings, SSPM
updates the policy status on the Security Configurations page. In this way, SSPM
helps you track the status of your most critical applications to maintain a healthy
security posture.
- To navigate to the Settings Management view, select SSPMSecurity Configurations.Select the tabs to view either the predefined Rules or the administrator-defined Policies.In the table, locate rules or policies that have a Failed status.Investigate the Failed status.
- To investigate a failed rule:
- Click the Rule Name to view the application settings that SSPM monitors for the rule or policy.
- In the list of settings, locate the ones that have a violation. Click the setting name to view details about the violation, including the current value of the settings and the recommended value. Follow the remediation instructions, or, if automated remediation is available for the application, have SSPM Remediate the setting.
- To investigate a failed policy:
- For the failed policy, identify the applications that are being monitored by the policy. This information is shown in the Applications column of the table.
- Navigate to the Applications page (Posture SecurityApplications).
- Locate the applications that are being monitored by the policy, and View Details.
- In the list of settings, locate the ones that have a violation. Click the setting name to view details about the violation, including the current value of the settings and the recommended value. Follow the remediation instructions, or, if automated remediation is available for the application, have SSPM Remediate the setting.