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    Best way to secure DHCP so that not just anyone can plug their PC in and get an IP? (Windows DC with DHCP)

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    • scottalanmillerS
      scottalanmiller @Dashrender
      last edited by

      @dashrender said in Best way to secure DHCP so that not just anyone can plug their PC in and get an IP? (Windows DC with DHCP):

      I had a friend who worked at a publicly traded company. Because of Sarbanes Oxley they had to do their own audits and submit them to the board or whoever they submit to so the shareholders could know the company was "doing thing right."

      They hired two companies to do audits, they hired Deloitte to do the first audit, and both sides would work on the audit until it was a place they both mutually agreed was good for the company/the shareholders, etc. Then they would hire some smaller audit company (Acme) to do the official audit. If Acme provided any failure points, my friend's company and Deloitte would consider it and push back if needed - my friend's company used the power of Deloitte to keep the official audit in line.

      I'm not saying this is a great situation - but it's basically about finding a defender for your side to make sure the auditor isn't trying to screw you.

      If your internal IT isn't that push back, you shouldn't have an auditor.

      Having an auditor to check on your IT is one thing, but needing to audit your auditor means you have a bigger problem.

      DashrenderD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
      • DashrenderD
        Dashrender @scottalanmiller
        last edited by

        @scottalanmiller said in Best way to secure DHCP so that not just anyone can plug their PC in and get an IP? (Windows DC with DHCP):

        @dashrender said in Best way to secure DHCP so that not just anyone can plug their PC in and get an IP? (Windows DC with DHCP):

        I had a friend who worked at a publicly traded company. Because of Sarbanes Oxley they had to do their own audits and submit them to the board or whoever they submit to so the shareholders could know the company was "doing thing right."

        They hired two companies to do audits, they hired Deloitte to do the first audit, and both sides would work on the audit until it was a place they both mutually agreed was good for the company/the shareholders, etc. Then they would hire some smaller audit company (Acme) to do the official audit. If Acme provided any failure points, my friend's company and Deloitte would consider it and push back if needed - my friend's company used the power of Deloitte to keep the official audit in line.

        I'm not saying this is a great situation - but it's basically about finding a defender for your side to make sure the auditor isn't trying to screw you.

        If your internal IT isn't that push back, you shouldn't have an auditor.

        Having an auditor to check on your IT is one thing, but needing to audit your auditor means you have a bigger problem.

        In that case - they would likely claim that they didn't have IT then.. and that the first auditor is their IT.
        Their big projects were always handled by ITSPs, not internal resources.. so in this case, they just had another ITSP like (the first auditor) acting as IT.

        scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • scottalanmillerS
          scottalanmiller @Dashrender
          last edited by

          @dashrender said in Best way to secure DHCP so that not just anyone can plug their PC in and get an IP? (Windows DC with DHCP):

          @scottalanmiller said in Best way to secure DHCP so that not just anyone can plug their PC in and get an IP? (Windows DC with DHCP):

          @dashrender said in Best way to secure DHCP so that not just anyone can plug their PC in and get an IP? (Windows DC with DHCP):

          I had a friend who worked at a publicly traded company. Because of Sarbanes Oxley they had to do their own audits and submit them to the board or whoever they submit to so the shareholders could know the company was "doing thing right."

          They hired two companies to do audits, they hired Deloitte to do the first audit, and both sides would work on the audit until it was a place they both mutually agreed was good for the company/the shareholders, etc. Then they would hire some smaller audit company (Acme) to do the official audit. If Acme provided any failure points, my friend's company and Deloitte would consider it and push back if needed - my friend's company used the power of Deloitte to keep the official audit in line.

          I'm not saying this is a great situation - but it's basically about finding a defender for your side to make sure the auditor isn't trying to screw you.

          If your internal IT isn't that push back, you shouldn't have an auditor.

          Having an auditor to check on your IT is one thing, but needing to audit your auditor means you have a bigger problem.

          In that case - they would likely claim that they didn't have IT then.. and that the first auditor is their IT.
          Their big projects were always handled by ITSPs, not internal resources.. so in this case, they just had another ITSP like (the first auditor) acting as IT.

          Could be.

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • ObsolesceO
            Obsolesce @dave247
            last edited by

            @dave247

            https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=14&cad=rja&uact=8&ved=0ahUKEwiDhoGsmJ7YAhWmxlQKHWFpC_kQFghoMA0&url=https%3A%2F%2Ftechnet.microsoft.com%2Fen-us%2Flibrary%2Fhh831353(v%3Dws.11).aspx&usg=AOvVaw3rsKaJYlb3Bg-lBqlfWNPj

            DHCP filtering lots of ways.

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • ObsolesceO
              Obsolesce
              last edited by Obsolesce

              Wtf how are there 132 posts? Just noticed. I can't read all those...

              DustinB3403D DashrenderD dave247D 3 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
              • DustinB3403D
                DustinB3403 @Obsolesce
                last edited by

                @tim_g said in Best way to secure DHCP so that not just anyone can plug their PC in and get an IP? (Windows DC with DHCP):

                Wtf how are there 132 posts? Just noticed. I can't read all those...

                It's been a busy morning here.

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • DashrenderD
                  Dashrender @Obsolesce
                  last edited by

                  @tim_g said in Best way to secure DHCP so that not just anyone can plug their PC in and get an IP? (Windows DC with DHCP):

                  Wtf how are there 132 posts? Just noticed. I can't read all those...

                  Because the thread had to change from a request on how to do NAC using MS products into - why do you want NAC? oh you're being audited? The Audit wants what? it wants a NIST requirement/suggestion that you have Static IPs only - well then NAC doesn't solve your audit issue, and oh yeah... your Audit isn't about security, it's about check boxes.

                  I think that about sums it up.

                  dave247D 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
                  • dave247D
                    dave247 @Obsolesce
                    last edited by

                    @tim_g said in Best way to secure DHCP so that not just anyone can plug their PC in and get an IP? (Windows DC with DHCP):

                    Wtf how are there 132 posts? Just noticed. I can't read all those...

                    Don't. Just tell me how the eff can I easily restrict non-company computers from getting a DHCP address.

                    ObsolesceO DashrenderD scottalanmillerS 3 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • dave247D
                      dave247 @Dashrender
                      last edited by

                      @dashrender said in Best way to secure DHCP so that not just anyone can plug their PC in and get an IP? (Windows DC with DHCP):

                      @tim_g said in Best way to secure DHCP so that not just anyone can plug their PC in and get an IP? (Windows DC with DHCP):

                      Wtf how are there 132 posts? Just noticed. I can't read all those...

                      Because the thread had to change from a request on how to do NAC using MS products into - why do you want NAC? oh you're being audited? The Audit wants what? it wants a NIST requirement/suggestion that you have Static IPs only - well then NAC doesn't solve your audit issue, and oh yeah... your Audit isn't about security, it's about check boxes.

                      I think that about sums it up.

                      Yes, good job.

                      snorts ghost pepper

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • ObsolesceO
                        Obsolesce @dave247
                        last edited by Obsolesce

                        @dave247 said in Best way to secure DHCP so that not just anyone can plug their PC in and get an IP? (Windows DC with DHCP):

                        @tim_g said in Best way to secure DHCP so that not just anyone can plug their PC in and get an IP? (Windows DC with DHCP):

                        Wtf how are there 132 posts? Just noticed. I can't read all those...

                        Don't. Just tell me how the eff can I easily restrict non-company computers from getting a DHCP address.

                        If that's all you need to worry about, you can either use IPAM with DHCP filtering, or you can use IPSEC.

                        ObsolesceO 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • ObsolesceO
                          Obsolesce @Obsolesce
                          last edited by Obsolesce

                          Becuase, if you get into that stuff without IPAM, it becomes harder to manage and to see what's what. Not sure of your network size, but assuming it's not 10 computers.

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • DashrenderD
                            Dashrender @dave247
                            last edited by

                            @dave247 said in Best way to secure DHCP so that not just anyone can plug their PC in and get an IP? (Windows DC with DHCP):

                            @tim_g said in Best way to secure DHCP so that not just anyone can plug their PC in and get an IP? (Windows DC with DHCP):

                            Wtf how are there 132 posts? Just noticed. I can't read all those...

                            Don't. Just tell me how the eff can I easily restrict non-company computers from getting a DHCP address.

                            You can't. DHCP just doesn't work that way.

                            For security while using DHCP, NAC is solution ( as you already found the settings in DHCP and the use of Network Access Protection).
                            Of course, this will still fail the - I plugged my laptop in and got an IP address test that the auditor is using for that checkbox (that's the wrong test to use for that checkbox by the way).

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                            • scottalanmillerS
                              scottalanmiller @dave247
                              last edited by

                              @dave247 said in Best way to secure DHCP so that not just anyone can plug their PC in and get an IP? (Windows DC with DHCP):

                              @tim_g said in Best way to secure DHCP so that not just anyone can plug their PC in and get an IP? (Windows DC with DHCP):

                              Wtf how are there 132 posts? Just noticed. I can't read all those...

                              Don't. Just tell me how the eff can I easily restrict non-company computers from getting a DHCP address.

                              But we figured out that that was not your goal. You keep going back and forth between three different things....

                              1. How do you secure your network (never asked, but you stated was your goal.)
                              2. How do restrict DHCP in the way stated here and in the OP.
                              3. How to meet the requirements of the audit.

                              There totally different goals. You haven't settled on one. Every time someone asks, you state a different one as being what you are trying to do. You have to decide on your goal before anyone can answer clearly. This is why this has gone on so long. We've been trying to determine what the goal is, that's why I dug into your work situation to help to find out what the goal is.

                              ObsolesceO 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • scottalanmillerS
                                scottalanmiller
                                last edited by

                                Of the three options. One should be ruled out immediately because it meets neither your personal goals (security) or the company's political goals (satisfying the audit)... and that's the one in the OP.... locking down DHCP meets no goals at all. It won't secure the environment nor will it satisfy the audit. That is the one that makes no logical sense for you to be considering at all. It serves no purpose.

                                The other two options.... actually securing the environment and telling the auditor (and your boss) to screw off; or just going static and doing what the auditor and your boss have demanded that you do, both have their own merits.

                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • ObsolesceO
                                  Obsolesce @scottalanmiller
                                  last edited by

                                  @scottalanmiller said in Best way to secure DHCP so that not just anyone can plug their PC in and get an IP? (Windows DC with DHCP):

                                  @dave247 said in Best way to secure DHCP so that not just anyone can plug their PC in and get an IP? (Windows DC with DHCP):

                                  @tim_g said in Best way to secure DHCP so that not just anyone can plug their PC in and get an IP? (Windows DC with DHCP):

                                  Wtf how are there 132 posts? Just noticed. I can't read all those...

                                  Don't. Just tell me how the eff can I easily restrict non-company computers from getting a DHCP address.

                                  But we figured out that that was not your goal. You keep going back and forth between three different things....

                                  1. How do you secure your network (never asked, but you stated was your goal.)
                                  2. How do restrict DHCP in the way stated here and in the OP.
                                  3. How to meet the requirements of the audit.

                                  There totally different goals. You haven't settled on one. Every time someone asks, you state a different one as being what you are trying to do. You have to decide on your goal before anyone can answer clearly. This is why this has gone on so long. We've been trying to determine what the goal is, that's why I dug into your work situation to help to find out what the goal is.

                                  I didn't read the all the posts, but if this is the case, then IPSEC all network communications would be a great start.

                                  scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • scottalanmillerS
                                    scottalanmiller @Obsolesce
                                    last edited by

                                    @tim_g said in Best way to secure DHCP so that not just anyone can plug their PC in and get an IP? (Windows DC with DHCP):

                                    @scottalanmiller said in Best way to secure DHCP so that not just anyone can plug their PC in and get an IP? (Windows DC with DHCP):

                                    @dave247 said in Best way to secure DHCP so that not just anyone can plug their PC in and get an IP? (Windows DC with DHCP):

                                    @tim_g said in Best way to secure DHCP so that not just anyone can plug their PC in and get an IP? (Windows DC with DHCP):

                                    Wtf how are there 132 posts? Just noticed. I can't read all those...

                                    Don't. Just tell me how the eff can I easily restrict non-company computers from getting a DHCP address.

                                    But we figured out that that was not your goal. You keep going back and forth between three different things....

                                    1. How do you secure your network (never asked, but you stated was your goal.)
                                    2. How do restrict DHCP in the way stated here and in the OP.
                                    3. How to meet the requirements of the audit.

                                    There totally different goals. You haven't settled on one. Every time someone asks, you state a different one as being what you are trying to do. You have to decide on your goal before anyone can answer clearly. This is why this has gone on so long. We've been trying to determine what the goal is, that's why I dug into your work situation to help to find out what the goal is.

                                    I didn't read the all the posts, but if this is the case, then IPSEC all network communications would be a great start.

                                    Sort of. But what we REALLY determined is that he has one, and only one solid requirement... that he has to move to static IPs. The desire for security was a misunderstanding he had based on something he thought that they were implying with the requirement, but it was incorrect and not what it said (and definitely not what it implied.) The only answer that doesn't risk his job is going to static IPs. The goal for security is his own personal one and not one from the audit or his boss. The demand for static IPs is from the auditor and his boss. That's the task he's required to do.

                                    ObsolesceO stacksofplatesS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • ObsolesceO
                                      Obsolesce @scottalanmiller
                                      last edited by

                                      @scottalanmiller said in Best way to secure DHCP so that not just anyone can plug their PC in and get an IP? (Windows DC with DHCP):

                                      @tim_g said in Best way to secure DHCP so that not just anyone can plug their PC in and get an IP? (Windows DC with DHCP):

                                      @scottalanmiller said in Best way to secure DHCP so that not just anyone can plug their PC in and get an IP? (Windows DC with DHCP):

                                      @dave247 said in Best way to secure DHCP so that not just anyone can plug their PC in and get an IP? (Windows DC with DHCP):

                                      @tim_g said in Best way to secure DHCP so that not just anyone can plug their PC in and get an IP? (Windows DC with DHCP):

                                      Wtf how are there 132 posts? Just noticed. I can't read all those...

                                      Don't. Just tell me how the eff can I easily restrict non-company computers from getting a DHCP address.

                                      But we figured out that that was not your goal. You keep going back and forth between three different things....

                                      1. How do you secure your network (never asked, but you stated was your goal.)
                                      2. How do restrict DHCP in the way stated here and in the OP.
                                      3. How to meet the requirements of the audit.

                                      There totally different goals. You haven't settled on one. Every time someone asks, you state a different one as being what you are trying to do. You have to decide on your goal before anyone can answer clearly. This is why this has gone on so long. We've been trying to determine what the goal is, that's why I dug into your work situation to help to find out what the goal is.

                                      I didn't read the all the posts, but if this is the case, then IPSEC all network communications would be a great start.

                                      Sort of. But what we REALLY determined is that he has one, and only one solid requirement... that he has to move to static IPs. The desire for security was a misunderstanding he had based on something he thought that they were implying with the requirement, but it was incorrect and not what it said (and definitely not what it implied.) The only answer that doesn't risk his job is going to static IPs. The goal for security is his own personal one and not one from the audit or his boss. The demand for static IPs is from the auditor and his boss. That's the task he's required to do.

                                      That makes sense.

                                      I don't see why static IPs would be a requirement for anything. That accomplishes nothing except a weird audit request.

                                      scottalanmillerS DustinB3403D 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • scottalanmillerS
                                        scottalanmiller @Obsolesce
                                        last edited by

                                        @tim_g said in Best way to secure DHCP so that not just anyone can plug their PC in and get an IP? (Windows DC with DHCP):

                                        @scottalanmiller said in Best way to secure DHCP so that not just anyone can plug their PC in and get an IP? (Windows DC with DHCP):

                                        @tim_g said in Best way to secure DHCP so that not just anyone can plug their PC in and get an IP? (Windows DC with DHCP):

                                        @scottalanmiller said in Best way to secure DHCP so that not just anyone can plug their PC in and get an IP? (Windows DC with DHCP):

                                        @dave247 said in Best way to secure DHCP so that not just anyone can plug their PC in and get an IP? (Windows DC with DHCP):

                                        @tim_g said in Best way to secure DHCP so that not just anyone can plug their PC in and get an IP? (Windows DC with DHCP):

                                        Wtf how are there 132 posts? Just noticed. I can't read all those...

                                        Don't. Just tell me how the eff can I easily restrict non-company computers from getting a DHCP address.

                                        But we figured out that that was not your goal. You keep going back and forth between three different things....

                                        1. How do you secure your network (never asked, but you stated was your goal.)
                                        2. How do restrict DHCP in the way stated here and in the OP.
                                        3. How to meet the requirements of the audit.

                                        There totally different goals. You haven't settled on one. Every time someone asks, you state a different one as being what you are trying to do. You have to decide on your goal before anyone can answer clearly. This is why this has gone on so long. We've been trying to determine what the goal is, that's why I dug into your work situation to help to find out what the goal is.

                                        I didn't read the all the posts, but if this is the case, then IPSEC all network communications would be a great start.

                                        Sort of. But what we REALLY determined is that he has one, and only one solid requirement... that he has to move to static IPs. The desire for security was a misunderstanding he had based on something he thought that they were implying with the requirement, but it was incorrect and not what it said (and definitely not what it implied.) The only answer that doesn't risk his job is going to static IPs. The goal for security is his own personal one and not one from the audit or his boss. The demand for static IPs is from the auditor and his boss. That's the task he's required to do.

                                        That makes sense.

                                        I don't see why static IPs would be a requirement for anything. That accomplishes nothing except a weird audit request.

                                        There's no logical reason. Boss and auditor just decided that they want them. That's all that there is to it. There is no business or technological reason. This is just about politics.

                                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • DustinB3403D
                                          DustinB3403 @Obsolesce
                                          last edited by

                                          @tim_g said in Best way to secure DHCP so that not just anyone can plug their PC in and get an IP? (Windows DC with DHCP):

                                          @scottalanmiller said in Best way to secure DHCP so that not just anyone can plug their PC in and get an IP? (Windows DC with DHCP):

                                          @tim_g said in Best way to secure DHCP so that not just anyone can plug their PC in and get an IP? (Windows DC with DHCP):

                                          @scottalanmiller said in Best way to secure DHCP so that not just anyone can plug their PC in and get an IP? (Windows DC with DHCP):

                                          @dave247 said in Best way to secure DHCP so that not just anyone can plug their PC in and get an IP? (Windows DC with DHCP):

                                          @tim_g said in Best way to secure DHCP so that not just anyone can plug their PC in and get an IP? (Windows DC with DHCP):

                                          Wtf how are there 132 posts? Just noticed. I can't read all those...

                                          Don't. Just tell me how the eff can I easily restrict non-company computers from getting a DHCP address.

                                          But we figured out that that was not your goal. You keep going back and forth between three different things....

                                          1. How do you secure your network (never asked, but you stated was your goal.)
                                          2. How do restrict DHCP in the way stated here and in the OP.
                                          3. How to meet the requirements of the audit.

                                          There totally different goals. You haven't settled on one. Every time someone asks, you state a different one as being what you are trying to do. You have to decide on your goal before anyone can answer clearly. This is why this has gone on so long. We've been trying to determine what the goal is, that's why I dug into your work situation to help to find out what the goal is.

                                          I didn't read the all the posts, but if this is the case, then IPSEC all network communications would be a great start.

                                          Sort of. But what we REALLY determined is that he has one, and only one solid requirement... that he has to move to static IPs. The desire for security was a misunderstanding he had based on something he thought that they were implying with the requirement, but it was incorrect and not what it said (and definitely not what it implied.) The only answer that doesn't risk his job is going to static IPs. The goal for security is his own personal one and not one from the audit or his boss. The demand for static IPs is from the auditor and his boss. That's the task he's required to do.

                                          That makes sense.

                                          I don't see why static IPs would be a requirement for anything. That accomplishes nothing except a weird audit request.

                                          And that is what the basis of this topic is.

                                          The audit question reads along the lines of "If I connect my laptop to a ethernet port, will I get an IP address? If Yes, fail, If No, Pass. "

                                          ObsolesceO scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • ObsolesceO
                                            Obsolesce @DustinB3403
                                            last edited by

                                            @dustinb3403 said in Best way to secure DHCP so that not just anyone can plug their PC in and get an IP? (Windows DC with DHCP):

                                            @tim_g said in Best way to secure DHCP so that not just anyone can plug their PC in and get an IP? (Windows DC with DHCP):

                                            @scottalanmiller said in Best way to secure DHCP so that not just anyone can plug their PC in and get an IP? (Windows DC with DHCP):

                                            @tim_g said in Best way to secure DHCP so that not just anyone can plug their PC in and get an IP? (Windows DC with DHCP):

                                            @scottalanmiller said in Best way to secure DHCP so that not just anyone can plug their PC in and get an IP? (Windows DC with DHCP):

                                            @dave247 said in Best way to secure DHCP so that not just anyone can plug their PC in and get an IP? (Windows DC with DHCP):

                                            @tim_g said in Best way to secure DHCP so that not just anyone can plug their PC in and get an IP? (Windows DC with DHCP):

                                            Wtf how are there 132 posts? Just noticed. I can't read all those...

                                            Don't. Just tell me how the eff can I easily restrict non-company computers from getting a DHCP address.

                                            But we figured out that that was not your goal. You keep going back and forth between three different things....

                                            1. How do you secure your network (never asked, but you stated was your goal.)
                                            2. How do restrict DHCP in the way stated here and in the OP.
                                            3. How to meet the requirements of the audit.

                                            There totally different goals. You haven't settled on one. Every time someone asks, you state a different one as being what you are trying to do. You have to decide on your goal before anyone can answer clearly. This is why this has gone on so long. We've been trying to determine what the goal is, that's why I dug into your work situation to help to find out what the goal is.

                                            I didn't read the all the posts, but if this is the case, then IPSEC all network communications would be a great start.

                                            Sort of. But what we REALLY determined is that he has one, and only one solid requirement... that he has to move to static IPs. The desire for security was a misunderstanding he had based on something he thought that they were implying with the requirement, but it was incorrect and not what it said (and definitely not what it implied.) The only answer that doesn't risk his job is going to static IPs. The goal for security is his own personal one and not one from the audit or his boss. The demand for static IPs is from the auditor and his boss. That's the task he's required to do.

                                            That makes sense.

                                            I don't see why static IPs would be a requirement for anything. That accomplishes nothing except a weird audit request.

                                            And that is what the basis of this topic is.

                                            The audit question reads along the lines of "If I connect my laptop to a ethernet port, will I get an IP address? If Yes, fail, If No, Pass. "

                                            Lol.

                                            That's like saying... "Can I stick my hand in the cookie jar and take a cookie? If yes, fail (lid is off)... If no, pass (lid is on)."

                                            scottalanmillerS DustinB3403D 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
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