What should you do?
You are a security administrator for your company. The network consists of a single Active Directory domain. Servers run either Windows Server 2003 or Windows 2000 Server. All client computers run Windows XP Professional.
The company’s written security policy states that user accounts must be locked if an unauthorized user attempts to guess the users, passwords. The current account policy locks out a user after two invalid password attempts in five minutes. The user remains locked out until the account is reset by an administrator. Users frequently call the help desk to have their account unlocked. Calls related to account lockout constitute 25 percent of help desk calls.
You need to reduce the number of help desk calls related to account lockout. What should you do?
What should you do?
You are a security administrator for your company. The network consists of a single Active Directory domain. All servers run Windows Server 2003. All client computers run Windows 2000 Professional.
You manage a Windows Server 2003 computer named Server1 that is a domain member server. You use IIS on Server1 to host an Internet Web site. Approximately 4,000 employees of your company connect over the lnternet to access company confidential data on Server1. You control access to data on Server1 by using NTFS file permissions assigned to groups. Different groups are assigned access to different files. Employees must have access only to files that they are assigned access to based on their membership in a group. You enable SSL on Server1 to protect confidential data while it is in transit. You issue each employee an Authenticated Session certificate and store a copy of that certificate with their user account in the Active Directory domain.
You need to ensure that Server1 authenticates users based on possession of their certificate. What should you do?
What should you do?
You are a security administrator for your company. The network consists of a single Active Directory domain. All servers run Windows Server 2003. The network contains three member servers named Server1, Server2, and Server3.
The three member servers are connected to the Internet. You plan to implement remote access to the company network for users that work from home. You configure and enable Routing and Remote Access on Server1 and Server2. An assistant, who is an administrator on all member servers, configures and enables Routing and Remote Access on Server3. Users from the domain can successfully establish VPN connections from the lnternet to Server1 and Server2. However, users cannot establish a VPN connection to Server3. You discover that Server3 can only authenticate Internet VPN connections from local user accounts.
You need to ensure that users from the domain can successfully establish a VPN connection to Server3. What should you do?
How should you configure Server1?
You are a security administrator for your company. The network consists of a single Active Directory domain. All client computers run Windows XP Professional. All servers run Windows Server 2003. All computers on the network are members of the domain.
Traffic on the network is encrypted by IPSec. The domain contains a custom IPSec policy named Lan Security that applies to all computers in the domain. The Lan Security policy does not allow unsecured communication with non-lPSec-aware computers. The company’s written security policy states that the configuration of the domain and the configuration of the Lan Security policy must not be changed. The domain contains a multihomed server named Server1. Server1 is connected to the company network, and Server1 is also connected to a test network. Currently, the Lan Security IPSec policy applies to network traffic on both network adapters in Server1.
You need to configure Server1 so that it communicates on the test network without IPSec security. Server1 must still use the Lan Security policy when it communicates on the company network. How should you configure Server1?
What should you do?
You are a security administrator for your company. The company consists of two divisions. One division is named Coho Winery and is located in San Francisco. The other division is named Coho Vineyard and is located in Paris. Each division is connected to the lnternet by a 1. 544 Mbps WAN connection.
Coho Winery consists of a single Active Directory forest named cohowinery.com. All servers run Windows Server 2003. All client computers run Windows XP Professional. Coho Winery has a Microsoft SQL Server 2000 database that contains customer information. The SQL Server 2000 database is hosted on a Windows Server 2003 computer named Server1.
Coho Vineyard consists of a single Active Directory forest named cohovineyard.com. All servers run Windows 2000 Server. All client computers run Windows 2000 Professional or Windows NT Workstation. All computers run the latest service packs.
To enable data replication, you configure a new Windows Server 2003 computer named Server2 in the cohovineyard.com forest. You install SQL Server 2000 on Server2. Your database administrator configures the database on Server1 to replicate to Server2 every night.
Management reports that a competitor acquired confidential customer data. You determine that the competitor intercepted customer data as it replicated from Server1 to Server2. You decide to use IPSec to protect customer data as it replicates.
You need to configure an IPSec policy to protect customer data as it replicates. What should you do?