In this section
Module Summary
Module Summary
Module MSA1 designed the identity architecture that every security control in the course operates on.
Tenant architecture (Section 1.1). Single-tenant vs multi-tenant decision. Scope implications for every downstream control — CA, PIM, Sentinel, governance.
Identity types (Section 1.2). Cloud-only users, synced users, guest identities, application registrations, service principals, managed identities. Each type inventoried and categorized for governance.
Identity attack surface (Section 1.3). Type-specific attack vectors: password spray and AiTM for cloud users, hash extraction for synced users, cross-tenant exploitation for guests, secret exposure for workload identities.
Hybrid identity (Section 1.4). Cloud Sync with password hash sync — the recommended architecture for NE. Decision documented: sync method, write-back scope, attack surface trade-offs.
Hybrid legacy (Section 1.5). ADFS, pass-through authentication agents, and legacy sync components. Documented as risks with compensating controls and migration timelines, not ignored as technical debt.
Administrative Units (Section 1.6). Site-based delegation model scoping admin roles to HQ, manufacturing, and research lab. Least-privilege administration without tenant-wide scope.
Identity lifecycle (Section 1.7). Three-stage governance: joiner provisioning, mover access reviews, leaver deprovisioning. Automated where possible, governed where manual.
Stale identities (Section 1.8). Audit queries for accounts without sign-in activity. Remediation process for disabled-but-not-deleted accounts, orphaned guests, and unmonitored service principals.
Naming conventions (Section 1.9). Standardized naming across users, groups, applications, and administrative units. The mechanism that makes policies targetable and the directory auditable.
Group architecture (Section 1.10). Dynamic membership, role-assignable groups, nested groups. The targeting mechanism for Conditional Access, PIM, DLP, and every policy in the course.
NE identity assessment (Section 1.11). Baseline audit against the architecture standards. Gaps documented as risk register entries.
Lab (Section 1.12). Implementation of the identity architecture in your developer tenant.
Guided walkthrough (Section 1.13). End-to-end trace of how each identity decision constrains the next — tenant scope to identity types to hybrid sync to attack surface to AUs to lifecycle to naming to groups.
Architecture package status
Your architecture package now contains:
- 3-4 ADRs covering tenant architecture, identity governance, hybrid sync, and AU structure
- Identity topology diagram showing all identity types and sync flows
- Risk register entries for every identity gap identified in the assessment
- Baseline metrics: identity count by type, stale identity count, governance coverage
This is the foundation. MSA2 designs the authentication layer on top of it.
What happens next
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