From Tanium 6.5 Security Technical Implementation Guide
Part of SRG-APP-000328
Associated with: CCI-002165
Discretionary Access Control (DAC) is based on the notion that individual users are "owners" of objects and therefore have discretion over who should be authorized to access the object and in which mode (e.g., read or write). Ownership is usually acquired as a consequence of creating the object or via specified ownership assignment. DAC allows the owner to determine who will have access to objects they control. An example of DAC includes user controlled file permissions.
Access the Tanium Server interactively. Log on with an account with administrative privileges to the server. Run regedit as Administrator. Navigate to HKLM\Local_Machine\Software\Wow6432Node. Right-click on \Tanium, select “Properties”. Click on the “Security” tab, “Advanced” button. Validate the [Tanium service account] is only account with full permissions. Validate the User accounts do not have any permissions. If any other account has full permissions and/or the User account has any permissions, this is a finding.
Access the Tanium Server interactively. Log on with an account with administrative privileges to the server. Run regedit as Administrator. Navigate to HKLM\Local_Machine\Software\Wow6432Node. Right-click on \Tanium, select “Properties”. Click on the “Security” tab, “Advanced” button. Provide the [Tanium service account] with full permissions. Reduce permissions for any other accounts with full permissions. Remove permissions for User accounts.
Lavender hyperlinks in small type off to the right (of CSS
class id
, if you view the page source) point to
globally unique URIs for each document and item. Copy the
link location and paste anywhere you need to talk
unambiguously about these things.
You can obtain data about documents and items in other
formats. Simply provide an HTTP header Accept:
text/turtle
or
Accept: application/rdf+xml
.
Powered by sagemincer