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Real-Time Safe Link Protection for Teams Messages

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Now Generally Available for Microsoft Defender for Office 365 Customers

The July 27 announcement of the General Availability of Safe Links for Teams is a welcome development. What it means is that if your tenant has Microsoft Defender for Office 365, you can update your Safe Links policy to include real-time checking of links posted to Teams chats and channel conversations.

Licensing Requirements

Licensing Microsoft Defender for Office 365 can be a little confusing. Two plans are available, both of which build on Exchange Online Protection (EOP):

Microsoft sometimes refers to the “security ladder from EOP to Microsoft Defender for Office 365” as a way of describing how the features in the Defender plans build on what you get in Exchange Online Protection (Figure 1).

Figure 1: Microsoft’s security ladder from EOP to Defender for Office 365

In this case, you need at least Microsoft Defender for Office 365 Plan 1 to use Safe Links protection for Teams.

Configuring Defender for Teams

The Safe Links policy is managed through the Policies & rules section of the Microsoft 365 security center. To edit the policy, open Threat policies and select Safe Links. The important change is to set Select the action for unknown or potentially malicious URLs within Microsoft Teams to On (Figure 2).

Figure 2: Configuring the Safe Links policy for Teams

At the same time, you should review the other Safe Links policy settings to make sure that they’re what you want. Three important settings used to detect and protect against malicious links in email also apply to links in Teams messages:

You can also see in Figure 2 that I’ve opted to use organization branding on the warning page. The branding used here (and shown in Figure 3) is taken from the tenant’s browser theme.

Figure 3: Microsoft Defender for Office 365 warns about a dangerous link

Usually, Teams calls the default browser to open a web link and that’s when Defender steps in to display the warning page. If a malicious link is used in a channel tab (which means that someone has created a web site tab for that link), Teams opens the warning page in the tab and doesn’t call the browser. If Defender passes the link as safe, Teams opens the page as normal.

Nice Extension into Teams

It’s good that Microsoft has extended Safe Links protection into Teams. Although I suspect that most bad links will continue to arrive in user mailboxes (if not detected and placed in quarantine by Exchange Online Protection), it’s entirely possible that some users will share problematic links through Teams chats or channel conversations. If they do, and your tenant has Defender for Office 365 with a properly configured Safe Links policy, those links will be blocked. What’s not to like about that?


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