Forum Discussion
rdankhara123
Apr 13, 2023Copper Contributor
MDCA is not allowing Chrome Plugins
Hi All, I have enabled MDCA for a Salesforce instance. We were using a Chrome plugin called "Salesforce Inspector". Plugin URL = https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/salesforce-inspecto...
Apr 13, 2023
Conditional Access App Control works by proxying user connections to cloud apps (provided Azure AD is used for authentication) through the MDCA service, and then monitoring connections and applying policies to user sessions in real time. Because connections are proxied, rather than direct to the app, the policies defined can control – at a granular level – the functionality delivered to the end user.
Keep in mind that app control only works for web sessions, so if you want to ensure your cloud apps are secured, you might want to block desktop and mobile apps or manage them by using Endpoint Manager or other means.
Keep in mind that app control only works for web sessions, so if you want to ensure your cloud apps are secured, you might want to block desktop and mobile apps or manage them by using Endpoint Manager or other means.
rdankhara123
Apr 14, 2023Copper Contributor
Yes, the issue is only for Web Sessions, we do not have desktop or mobile apps.
The Chrome extensions ("Salesforce Inspector" is the plugin name) that work fine with Web Sessions without MDCA are not visible when we enable MDCA on Salesforce.
PFa screenshot.
- Apr 15, 2023
rdankhara123 yes MDCA can block . If MD blocks then you will find log