AppLocker, which is built in to Windows 7 Enterprise and later, prevents unknown programs from running unless installed or otherwise pre-cleared by an admin first. This is increasingly necessary because even antivirus companies are publicly saying that antivirus provides little protection against current malware. Rather than attempt to enumerate what's bad, application whitelisting technologies like AppLocker enumerate what's good, and deny everything else. This turns out to be less difficult than it sounds.
Current status
A "reporting-only" AppLocker policy is in place for most campus computers. The policy is maintained by the Information Security Officer (Rich Graves).
Selected Business Office and ITS computers have been placed in an organizational unit (OU) that blocks unapproved programs.
If a program won't run and you are directed to this page
When a program is blocked by AppLocker, Windows will pop up the message shown at right. The "More information" link goes to the web page you are reading now.
If you are confident that the program came from a legitimate source, you can override the policy and run the blocked application by following these steps:
- Create a new folder with a certain name. Contact infosec@carleton.edu or ask the ITS helpdesk to refer to WebHelpDesk ticket #66807 for the magic word to use.
- Move the program and any dependencies into the new folder.
- Run the program from there.
The Information Security Officer should review a report on such overrides and as appropriate, add them to the centrally managed policy.
References for understanding AppLocker
- Application whitelisting explained
- Using Event Viewer with AppLocker
- Display a custom URL when an application is blocked
- Free, almost perfect malware protection with GPO AppLocker
- A pragmatic approach towards AppLocker policies
- DSD confirms: application whitelisting is the go
- AppLocker Guide for Technical Decision Makers
(Yes, AppLocker makes even more sense for servers, which run a more predictable set of software.)