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General Security Discussions
What will cybersecurity software look like in the future, say 10-30 years from now?
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<blockquote data-quote="ForgottenSeer 95367" data-source="post: 1005222"><p>You stated that SRP is not running on W11. It is running - but it is and it is called WDAC. WDAC is built upon and extends the classic SRP.</p><p></p><p></p><p>Legacy SRP has the same context as WDAC if the proper plugins and logs are employed. It is not anywhere near as limited as you claim it to be.</p><p></p><p></p><p>1000s of processes can be added to SRP policy within minutes - all pulled from threat research and analytics.</p><p></p><p>But that is not always required. Dependent upon the use case, if there is not an explicit allow policy, then it shall be denied.</p><p></p><p>There are also versions of SRP out there where parent-child blocking can be configured. So you can whitelist a bunch of command lines, or whitelist a single child process, and then disallow all others (*).</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="ForgottenSeer 95367, post: 1005222"] You stated that SRP is not running on W11. It is running - but it is and it is called WDAC. WDAC is built upon and extends the classic SRP. Legacy SRP has the same context as WDAC if the proper plugins and logs are employed. It is not anywhere near as limited as you claim it to be. 1000s of processes can be added to SRP policy within minutes - all pulled from threat research and analytics. But that is not always required. Dependent upon the use case, if there is not an explicit allow policy, then it shall be denied. There are also versions of SRP out there where parent-child blocking can be configured. So you can whitelist a bunch of command lines, or whitelist a single child process, and then disallow all others (*). [/QUOTE]
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