Forum Discussion
Dealing with high number of failed log on attempts from foreign countries utilizing Exchange Online
- Dec 21, 2018
Not sure if any one has seen this. There is a new tool for your basket. This has helped us greatly.
A couple of months ago Microsoft released to preview and then has pushed forward 'Authentication Policies'.
These authentication policies are processed prior to being passed to AAD or ADFS saving the failed login against the account
And yes this can be applied to individual or small groups to test first (just remember to wait to assure the policy is applied to the user in question before calling it good or not)
See "https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/exchange/clients-and-mobile-in-exchange-online/disable-basic-authentication-in-exchange-online"
Basic outline
Assure you have modern authentication enabled for your organization
Create an authentication policy blocking basic auth for pop, imap and such (The biggest one we were seeing was imap)
If you have any user or service accounts that requires basic auth for any of the protocols you are disabling in the previous policy, create a second policy allowing the protocols
If you have any users that utilizing pop, imap or any other method you determine don't need basic authentication, get them migrated to some other form of client app or access
If there are any accounts that absolutely require basic auth (ie we have a ticketing system that utilizes imap with basic auth to connect to a specific mailbox), make note of them to exclude in your query for users to apply your restricted policy to
Query for and apply unrestricted policy to service account or user that requires the basic auth for the protocols disabled by the restricted policy
Query for and apply restricted policy to the majority of your users
Apply restricted policy as global default (for new users)
Either wait 24 hours for it to be applied or touch a user property on the user and wait approximately 30 minutes.
Note, the below worked for me. Make sure you research and adjust for your own needs. I take no responsibility for what you do to your environment. These are only examples
Exchange Powershell commands used
connect-exopssession -UserPrincipalName {exchangeonline admin}
New-AuthenticationPolicy -Name "Block_Basic_Auth_Selective”
{Blocks basic auth for imap, pop, smtp but allows for things like activesync}
(Adjust according to your needs)
Set-AuthenticationPolicy -Identity “Block_Basic_Auth_Selective” -AllowBasicAuthActiveSync -AllowBasicAuthAutodiscover -AllowBasicAuthImap:$false -AllowBasicAuthMapi -AllowBasicAuthOfflineAddressBook -AllowBasicAuthOutlookService:$false -AllowBasicAuthPop:$false -AllowBasicAuthReportingWebServices -AllowBasicAuthRest -AllowBasicAuthRpc -AllowBasicAuthSmtp:$false -AllowBasicAuthWebServices -AllowBasicAuthPowerShellNew-AuthenticationPolicy "Allow_Basic_Auth"
(Adjust according to your needs)
Set-AuthenticationPolicy -Identity “Allow_Basic_Auth” -AllowBasicAuthActiveSync:$true -AllowBasicAuthAutodiscover:$true -AllowBasicAuthImap:$true -AllowBasicAuthMapi:$true -AllowBasicAuthOfflineAddressBook:true -AllowBasicAuthOutlookService:$true -AllowBasicAuthPop:$true -AllowBasicAuthReportingWebServices -AllowBasicAuthRest -AllowBasicAuthRpc -AllowBasicAuthSmtp:$true -AllowBasicAuthWebServices:true -AllowBasicAuthPowerShellTo simplifiy things for my environment I manually set the users that required basic auth (I only had two)
set-user -Identity "User One" -AuthenticationPolicy "Allow_Basic_Auth"
To touch the user to make the policy get applied quicker
set-user -Identity "User One" -STSRefreshTokensValidFrom $([System.DateTime]::UtcNow)
For the rest of my users
$Users = Get-User -ResultSize unlimited | Where {$_.RecipientType -eq "UserMailbox" -and $_.AuthenticationPolicy -eq $null}
$users =$users.WindowsEmailAddress
$users | %{Set-User -Identity $_ -AuthenticationPolicy “Block_Basic_Auth_Selective”}
If you want to touch the users to apply policy quicker, since the query is already in memory
$users | %{Set-User -Identity $_ -STSRefreshTokensValidFrom $([System.DateTime]::UtcNow)}
Now the following command will apply the restricted policy as the global default. (Note, when I first implemented this, the unrestricted users did not have a policy applied and as such I thought they would have no policy applied, but once the default policy was applied to the global config, it affected the unrestricted unconfigured users.)Set-OrganizationConfig -DefaultAuthenticationPolicy “Block_Basic_Auth_Selective”
Remember, mileage will vary. Read everything you can find on Authentication Policy/iesFor us, for now, this has completely removed the issues we were having with illigitimate failed login attempts and account lockouts.
We ran into only the one issue mentioned above with the accounts that had no policy assigned and then the global policy being appliedRemember, it takes approximately 24 hours for the policy to be applied to a user unless one of the user's properties are modified
There is one thing I will mention, at this time, when this is applied, there is nothing logged for failed attempts that fall afoul of the blocked basic auth policy even in Azure Ad Sign-ins
-Gene
My organization is dealing with the same threat as you. We've been getting hit hard dating back a month ago now when it really became noticable.
We're testing with the Extranet Lockout but that in itself still isn't a great comeback.
The Extranet Lockout feature is nice for sure, but defintely not the definitive solution it could be.
I wish ADFS had a captcha feature that only kicked after a set number of failed attempts. Maybe one less than what is set for the Extranet Lockout. That way, endusers do not have to enter the captcha unless they are fat-fingered the password N amount of times, and the bad guys would that hoop to get through if they were hammering the relying party.
- Eugene PinsonMar 21, 2018Copper Contributor
Just a follow up note for anyone wanting to know;
Microsoft did implement a method of compliance policy that allowed for region blocking, only problem, it is applied after the attempted login so accounts are still locked out.
Further notes of other things I have looked at.
Can't use blocking at the ADFS WAP server or firewall fronting, as it is using Exchange Online as proxy (with legacy and activesync connections, Exchange makes the connection to the ADFS server for the client application so all you see is the Exchange Online server IPs)
Disabling all of the other protocols, imap/pop3/activesync doesn't work for the same reason, authentication attempt occurs before stating service unavailable/blocked.
-G