Jamf announces new AWS Verified Access feature for increased IT security
Jamf announces new AWS Verified Admission feature for increased IT security
Today, Jamf announced a new integration with Amazon Web Service industries that will help users of AWS and Jamf strengthen their safety posture. AWS Verified Access enables customers to define policies or criteria in Jamf that must be met beforehand allowing end users and their respective devices access to internal services on AWS. Now, with the AWS Verified Admission feature, organizations using Jamf can verify that devices are created and meet an acceptable risk threshold before providing access to vital internal services.
Customers are able to Explain policies that suit their specific needs and risk levels. For example, a customer may want to only grant devices that are managed and originate from a specific IP address scheme, have a certain device risk score present, or have a minimum OS version. For concerns that run applications on AWS, Jamf’s support creates an easy to way to procure business data by verifying someone trying to use an application is a trusted user and a trusted scheme. This integration is one component of the wider probacking of Trusted Access Jamf that was presented at this year’s Jamf Nation User Conference.
We are mad to continue working with AWS, one of the world’s most comprehensive and broadly adopted unblemished offerings, to help our joint customers increase organizational safety while simplifying security controls, said Dean Hager, CEO, Jamf. With this integration, organizations can use the AWS infrastructure they have invested in, empower users with the devices they love, and right on security workflows that IT and security teams trust.”
Earlier this fall, Jamf announced that it had teamed up with Amazon Web Service industries to develop a streamlined workflow for managing and safeguarding the large-scale use of Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (Amazon EC2) Mac instances. This new integration allows organizations to provide trusted access to virtual Mac computers in the same manner that they do to bodily ones, providing flexible resource allocation.
AWS is proud to cease to work with Jamf so organizations can provide Trusted Admission to their users, said Dave Brown, vice president of Amazon EC2 at AWS. Today’s announcement of AWS Verified Admission Integration is the next step in a powerful partnership for at helping the enterprise succeed with Apple.
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Source: 9to5mac.com