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Troubleshoot problems with tamper protection

Tamper protection is preventing my security team from managing a device. What should we do?

If your IT or security team is prevented from performing a necessary task on a device, consider using troubleshooting mode. After troubleshooting mode ends, any changes made to tamper-protected settings are reverted to their configured state.

Changes to Microsoft Defender Antivirus settings using Group Policy are ignored. Why is this happening, and what can we do about it?

If you're using Group Policy to manage Microsoft Defender Antivirus settings, keep in mind that tamper protection can block changes to certain settings in Microsoft Defender Antivirus. When you use Group Policy to make changes to Microsoft Defender Antivirus settings and the tamper protection is on, changes to tamper-protected settings are ignored. For more information, see What happens when tamper protection is turned on?

Depending on your particular scenario, you have several options available:

  • If you must make changes to a device and tamper protection is blocking those changes, you can use troubleshooting mode to temporarily disable tamper protection on the device. After troubleshooting mode ends, any changes made to tamper-protected settings are reverted to their configured state.

  • You can use Intune or Configuration Manager to exclude devices from tamper protection.

How do we protect exclusions for Microsoft Defender Antivirus?

  1. Ensure that all of the following requirements are met:

  2. Confirm that only Intune manages the device. Go to Computer\HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows Defender (or HKLM\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows Defender), and look for a REG_DWORD entry called ManagedDefenderProductType.

    • If ManagedDefenderProductType has a value of 6, then the device is managed by Intune only (this value is required to protect Microsoft Defender Antivirus exclusions).

    • If ManagedDefenderProductType has a value of 7, then the device is co-managed, such as by Intune and Configuration Manager (this value indicates that exclusions aren't currently tamper protected).

  3. Confirm that tamper protection is deployed and that Microsoft Defender Antivirus exclusions are protected. Go to Computer\HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows Defender\Features (or HKLM\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows Defender\Features), and look for a REG_DWORD entry called TPExclusions.

    • If TPExclusions has a value of 1, then all required conditions are met, and the new functionality to protect exclusions is enabled on the device. In this case, exclusions are tamper protected.

    • If TPExclusions has a value of 0, then tamper protection isn't currently protecting exclusions on the device. (If you meet all the requirements and this state seems incorrect, contact support.)

    Caution

    Don't change the value of the registry keys. Use the preceding procedure for information only. Changing keys have no effect on whether tamper protection applies to exclusions.