Anti-malware protection in EOP
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In Microsoft 365 organizations with mailboxes in Exchange Online or standalone Exchange Online Protection (EOP) organizations without Exchange Online mailboxes, email messages are automatically protected against malware by EOP. Some of the major categories of malware are:
- Viruses that infect other programs and data, and spread through your computer or network looking for programs to infect.
- Spyware that gathers your personal information, such as sign-in information and personal data, and sends it back to its author.
- Ransomware that encrypts your data and demands payment to decrypt it. Anti-malware software doesn't help you decrypt encrypted files, but it can detect the malware payload that's associated with the ransomware.
EOP offers multi-layered malware protection that's designed to catch all known malware in Windows, Linux, and Mac that travels into or out of your organization. The following options help provide anti-malware protection:
- Layered defenses against malware: Anti-malware scans help protect against both known and unknown threats. Microsoft's anti-malware includes powerful heuristic detection that provides protection even during the early stages of a malware outbreak.
- Real-time threat response: During some outbreaks, the anti-malware team might have enough information about a virus or other form of malware to write sophisticated policy rules that detect the threat, even before a definition is available. These rules are published to the global network every 2 hours to provide your organization with an extra layer of protection against attacks.
- Fast anti-malware definition deployment: The anti-malware team can receive and integrate malware definitions and patches before they're publicly released.
In EOP, messages that are found to contain malware in any attachments are quarantined*. Whether the recipients can view or otherwise interact with the quarantined messages is controlled by quarantine policies. By default, messages that were quarantined due to malware can only be viewed and released by admins. Users can't release their own quarantined malware messages, regardless of any available settings that admins configure. For more information, see the following articles:
* Malware filtering is skipped on SecOps mailboxes that are identified in the advanced delivery policy. For more information, see Configure the advanced delivery policy for third-party phishing simulations and email delivery to SecOps mailboxes.
Anti-malware policies also contain a common attachments filter. Messages that contain the specified file types are automatically identified as malware. For more information, see the Common attachments filter in anti-malware policies section later in this article.
For more information about anti-malware protection, see the Anti-malware protection FAQ.
To configure the default anti-malware policy, and to create, modify, and remove custom anti-malware policies, see Configure anti-malware policies. In the Standard and Strict preset security policies, the anti-malware policy settings are already configured and unmodifiable as described in EOP anti-malware policy settings.
Tip
If you disagree with the malware verdict, you can report the message attachment to Microsoft as a false positive (good attachment marked as bad) or a false negative (bad attachment allowed). For more information, see How do I report a suspicious email or file to Microsoft?.
Anti-malware policies control the configurable settings and notification options for malware detections. The important settings in anti-malware policies are described in the following subsections.
Recipient filters use conditions and exceptions to identify the internal recipients that the policy applies to. At least one condition is required in custom policies. Conditions and exceptions aren't available in the default policy (the default policy applies to all recipients). You can use the following recipient filters for conditions and exceptions:
- Users: One or more mailboxes, mail users, or mail contacts in the organization.
- Groups:
- Members of the specified distribution groups or mail-enabled security groups (dynamic distribution groups aren't supported).
- The specified Microsoft 365 Groups.
- Domains: One or more of the configured accepted domains in Microsoft 365. The recipient's primary email address is in the specified domain.
You can use a condition or exception only once, but the condition or exception can contain multiple values:
Multiple values of the same condition or exception use OR logic (for example, <recipient1> or <recipient2>):
- Conditions: If the recipient matches any of the specified values, the policy is applied to them.
- Exceptions: If the recipient matches any of the specified values, the policy isn't applied to them.
Different types of exceptions use OR logic (for example, <recipient1> or <member of group1> or <member of domain1>). If the recipient matches any of the specified exception values, the policy isn't applied to them.
Different types of conditions use AND logic. The recipient must match all of the specified conditions for the policy to apply to them. For example, you configure a condition with the following values:
- Users:
romain@contoso.com
- Groups: Executives
The policy is applied to
romain@contoso.com
only if he's also a member of the Executives group. Otherwise, the policy isn't applied to him.- Users:
There are certain types of files that you really shouldn't send via email (for example, executable files). Why bother scanning these types of files for malware when you should block them all, anyway? That's where the common attachments filter comes in. The file types that you specify are automatically identified as malware.
A list of default file types is used in the default anti-malware policy, in custom anti-malware policies that you create, and in the anti-malware policies in the Standard and Strict preset security policies.
In the Microsoft Defender portal, you can select from a list of additional file types or add your own values when you create or modify anti-malware policies in the Microsoft Defender portal.
Default file types:
ace, ani, apk, app, appx, arj, bat, cab, cmd, com, deb, dex, dll, docm, elf, exe, hta, img, iso, jar, jnlp, kext, lha, lib, library, lnk, lzh, macho, msc, msi, msix, msp, mst, pif, ppa, ppam, reg, rev, scf, scr, sct, sys, uif, vb, vbe, vbs, vxd, wsc, wsf, wsh, xll, xz, z
.Additional file types to select in the Defender portal:
7z, 7zip, a, accdb, accde, action, ade, adp, appxbundle, asf, asp, aspx, avi, bas, bin, bundle, bz, bz2, bzip2, caction, cer, chm, command, cpl, crt, csh, css, der, dgz, dmg, doc, docx, dos, dot, dotm, dtox [sic], dylib, font, fxp, gadget, gz, gzip, hlp, Hta, htm, html, imp, inf, ins, ipa, isp, its, js, jse, ksh, Lnk, lqy, mad, maf, mag, mam, maq, mar, mas, mat, mau, mav, maw, mda, mdb, mde, mdt, mdw, mdz, mht, mhtml, mscompress, msh, msh1, msh1xml, msh2, msh2xml, mshxml, msixbundle, o, obj, odp, ods, odt, one, onenote, ops, os2, package, pages, pbix, pcd, pdb, pdf, php, pkg, plg, plugin, pps, ppsm, ppsx, ppt, pptm, pptx, prf, prg, ps1, ps1xml, ps2, ps2xml, psc1, psc2, pst, pub, py, rar, rpm, rtf, scpt, service, sh, shb, shs, shtm, shx, so, tar, tarz, terminal, tgz, tmp, tool, url, vhd, vsd, vsdm, vsdx, vsmacros, vss, vssx, vst, vstm, vstx, vsw, w16, workflow, ws, xhtml, xla, xlam, xls, xlsb, xlsm, xlsx, xlt, xltm, xltx, xnk, zi, zip, zipx
.
When files are detected by the common attachments filter, you can choose to Reject the message with a non-delivery report (NDR) or Quarantine the message.
The common attachments filter uses best effort true type matching to detect the file type, regardless of the filename extension. True type matching uses file characteristics to determine the real file type (for example, leading and trailing bytes in the file). For example, if an exe
file is renamed with a txt
filename extension, the common attachments filter detects the file as an exe
file.
True type matching in the common attachments filter supports the following file types:
7zip, ace, adoc, ani, arc, arj, asf, asice, avi, bmp, bz, bz2, cab, cda, chm, deb, dex, dll, dmg, doc, docm, docx, dot, dotm, dotx, dwg, eml, eps, epub, excelml, exe, fluid, gif, gzip, heic, heif, html, hyper, icon, ics, infopathml, jar, javabytecode, jnlp, jpeg, json, lib, lnk, lzh, lzma, macho, mhtml, mp3, mp4, mpeg, mpp, msaccess, mscompress, msg, msp, musx, nws, obd, obj, obt, odbcexcel, odc, odf, odg, odi, odm, odp, ods, odt, one, otc, otf, otg, oth, oti, otp, ots, ott, pal, pcx, pdf, pfb, pfile, pif, png, pointpub, pot, potm, potx, powerpointml, ppam, pps, ppsm, ppsx, ppt, pptm, pptx, ps, pub, qcp, quicktime, rar, rar4, riff, rmi, rpm, rpmsg, rtf, smime, swf, tar, tiff, tlb, tnef, ttf, txt, vcf, vcs, vdw, vdx, vsd, vsdm, vsdx, vss, vssm, vssx, vst, vstm, vstx, vsx, vtt, vtx, wav, webp, whiteboard, wmf, woff, woff2, word2, wordml, xar, xlam, xlb, xlc, xls, xlsb, xlsm, xlsx, xlt, xltm, xltx, xml, xps, xz, z, zip, zoo
If true type matching fails or isn't supported for the file type, then simple extension matching is used.
ZAP for malware quarantines messages that are found to contain malware after they've been delivered to Exchange Online mailboxes. By default, ZAP for malware is turned on, and we recommend that you leave it on. For more information, see Zero-hour auto purge (ZAP) for malware.
Quarantine policies define what users are able to do to quarantined messages, and whether users receive quarantine notifications. By default, recipients don't receive notifications for messages that were quarantined as malware, and users can't release their own quarantined malware messages, regardless of any available settings that admins configure. For more information, see Anatomy of a quarantine policy.
You can specify an additional recipient (an admin) to receive notifications for malware detected in messages from internal or external senders. You can customize the From address, subject, and message text for internal and external notifications.
These settings aren't configured in the default anti-malware policy by default, or in the Standard or Strict preset security policies.
Tip
Admin notifications are sent only for attachments that are classified as malware.
The quarantine policy that's assigned to the anti-malware policy determines whether recipients receive email notifications for messages that were quarantined as malware.
If they're turned on, the Standard and Strict preset security policies are applied before any custom anti-malware policies or the default policy (Strict is always first). If you create multiple custom anti-malware policies, you can specify the order that they're applied. Policy processing stops after the first policy is applied (the highest priority policy for that recipient).
For more information about the order of precedence and how multiple policies are evaluated, see Order and precedence of email protection and Order of precedence for preset security policies and other policies.
Every organization has a built-in anti-malware policy named Default that has the following properties:
- The policy is the default policy (the IsDefault property has the value
True
), and you can't delete the default policy. - The policy is automatically applied to all recipients in the organization, and you can't turn it off.
- The policy is always applied last (the Priority value is Lowest and you can't change it).