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The Admission tag covers security disclosures and statements that clarify how breaches or unauthorized access occurred.

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Background for this topic.

Admission is the decision to allow or deny a user, device, application, or service access to a resource. In information security, it usually combines authentication—checking who or what is requesting access—with authorization—determining which actions and resources are permitted. The term can also describe network or application admission controls that assess a device’s identity, configuration, or security state before allowing it to connect.

Weak admission controls can expose systems through stolen credentials, missing multi-factor authentication, misconfigured access-control lists, or roles that grant more privilege than necessary. Effective controls apply least privilege, restrict access by context where appropriate, and review permissions as people, devices, and services change. Recording both successful and rejected admission decisions supports detection and investigation of suspicious access, while periodic testing helps identify bypasses and unsafe defaults.

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Sometimes using AI to make hilariously wrong images that still drive social media engagement Microsoft, which earlier this week admitted not being able to detect a Chinese attack on its own infrastructure, has published a report [PDF] titled "Digital threats from East Asia increase in breadth and effectiveness." In the report, Redmond's Threat Intelligence group expounds on its fresh insight into evolving online aggressions from both China and North Korea.…