Home » Microsoft » AZ-900 v.2 » What should you use to evaluate whether your company’s Azure environment meets regulatory requirements?
What should you use to evaluate whether your company’s Azure environment meets regulatory requirements?
A. the Knowledge Center website
B. the Advisor blade from the Azure portal
C. Compliance Manager from the Security Trust Portal
D. the Security Center blade from the Azure portal
Correct Answer: D
Explanation/Reference:
The Security Center blade from the Azure portal includes the ‘regulatory compliance dashboard’.
The regulatory compliance dashboard provides insight into your compliance posture for a set of supported standards and regulations, based on continuous assessments of your Azure environment.
In the Azure Security Center regulatory compliance blade, you can get an overview of key portions of your compliance posture with respect to a set of supported standards. Currently supported standards are Azure CIS, PCI DSS 3.2, ISO 27001, and SOC TSP.
In the dashboard, you will find your overall compliance score, and the number of passing versus failing assessments with each standard. You can now focus your attention on the gaps in compliance for a standard or regulation that is important to you.
References: https://azure.microsoft.com/en-us/blog/regulatory-compliance-dashboard-in-azure-security-center-now-available/
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Security Center is now called “Microsoft Defender for Cloud”
This can be confusing but i came to the conclusion of using these key words:
Regulatory requirements –> Security center
regional / country regulations –> Trust Center
From Misrosofts own website:
Microsoft Compliance Manager is a dashboard and management tool that provides a summary of your data protection and compliance stature and recommendations to improve data protection and compliance. The customer actions provided in Compliance Manager are recommendations. It is up to your organization to evaluate the effectiveness of these recommendations in their respective regulatory environment prior to implementation. Recommendations found in Compliance Manager should not be interpreted as a guarantee of compliance.
Sounds a lot like C to me
Nope:
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/security-center/security-center-compliance-dashboard
Home > Security Center blade > Policy & Compliance > Regulatory compliance (if enabled on your subscription)
D is correct