News
        
        Windows Security Compliance Manager Released
        
        
        
			- By Herb Torrens
- 04/09/2010
Microsoft  rolled out Security Compliance Manager on Thursday to help IT pros design,  manage and monitor baseline security in Windows.
The tool, previously  available as a beta in February, is the newest member of Microsoft's Security  Compliance Management Toolkit, according to a Microsoft  blog. It's one of the free tools in the Microsoft "Solution  Accelerators" series.
"Security  Compliance Manager lets organizations centrally plan, view, update, and export  hundreds of Group Policy settings for Microsoft client and server OSes and  applications, "noted Donald S. Retallack, research vice president for systems  management and security at Directions on Microsoft, in an e-mail. 
The tool  works with Microsoft's Security Compliance Management Toolkit to manage  security settings for Windows XP, Vista,  Windows 7, Windows Server 2003 and Server 2008, Internet Explorer 8 and Office  2007, Retallack explained. Since it's used with Group Policy, it applies  only to Microsoft products, he added.
"The  tool does not return information -- it is used to provide standard settings to  other tools, such as Configuration Manager, for setting security settings on an  organization's computers," Retallack stated. "Security Compliance  Manager maintains a library of sets of security settings (baselines) with  recommended settings from Microsoft."
The  Microsoft Solution Accelerators team worked with IT pros, government agencies  and Microsoft security experts to develop the tool. Security Compliance Manager  is designed to accelerate the use of best practices, allow centralized decision  making, and help monitor, verify and comply with an organization's security  baselines, according to Microsoft's blog.
Security  baselines, as  defined by Wikipedia, are a "cookbook recipe for a normal level of  protection."
Such  baselines can include hundreds of settings, such as whether a user is allowed  to turn on Active-X controls in Internet Explorer, whether a workstation OS  requires password changes at some defined interval, whether BitLocker features  are enabled, and many others, according to Retallack.
Users of Security  Compliance Manager can access a database of Microsoft-recommended security  settings and then customize the baselines according to organizational needs. The  formats to export customized baselines include Desired Configuration Management,  Security Content Automation Protocol, Microsoft Excel, or Group Policy Objects.
"There  are lots of Microsoft tools that accomplish similar things," Retallack noted.  "One such enterprise tool for maintaining Group Policy Objects is the  Advanced Group Policy Manager (AGPM) in the Desktop Optimization Pack." 
Retallack,  however, noted that Security Compliance Manager is not just a marketing or  advertising play by the software giant.
"The  tool is not just advertising -- it can really help IT administrators maintain a  consistent set of security settings across an enterprise," he said. 
The  Microsoft Solution Accelerators team described the Security Compliance Manager tool  back in February in a series of videos that can be accessed here.
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Herb Torrens is an award-winning freelance writer based in Southern California. He managed the MCSP program for a leading computer telephony integrator for more than five years and has worked with numerous solution providers including HP/Compaq, Nortel, and Microsoft in all forms of media.