In Cortex XDR,custom prevention rulesare used to block specific behaviors or activities on endpoints by leveragingBehavioral Indicators of Compromise (BIOCs). BIOCs define patterns of behavior (e.g., specific process executions, file modifications, or network activities) that, when detected, can trigger preventive actions, such as blocking a process or isolating an endpoint. These BIOCs are typically associated with aRestriction profile, which enforces blocking actions for matched behaviors.
Correct Answer Analysis (C):Acustom behavioral indicator of compromise (BIOC)added to aRestriction profileenables a custom prevention rule to block specific behavior. The BIOC defines the behavior to detect (e.g., a process accessing a sensitive file), and the Restriction profile specifies the preventive action (e.g., block the process). This configuration ensures that the identified behavior is blocked on endpoints where the profile is applied.
Why not the other options?
A. A correlation rule added to an Agent Blocking profile: Correlation rules are used to generate alerts by correlating events across datasets, not to block behaviors directly. There is no “Agent Blocking profile” in Cortex XDR; this is a misnomer.
B. A custom behavioral indicator of compromise (BIOC) added to an Exploit profile: Exploit profiles are used to detect and prevent exploit-based attacks (e.g., memory corruption), not general behavioral patterns defined by BIOCs. BIOCs are associated with Restriction profiles for blocking behaviors.
D. A correlation rule added to a Malware profile: Correlation rules do not directly block behaviors; they generate alerts. Malware profiles focus on file-based threats (e.g., executables analyzed by WildFire), not behavioral blocking via BIOCs.
Exact Extract or Reference:
TheCortex XDR Documentation Portalexplains BIOC and Restriction profiles: “Custom BIOCs can be added to Restriction profiles to block specific behaviors on endpoints, enabling tailored prevention rules” (paraphrased from the BIOC and Restriction Profile sections). TheEDU-260: Cortex XDR Prevention and Deploymentcourse covers prevention rules, stating that “BIOCs in Restriction profiles enable blocking of specific endpoint behaviors” (paraphrased from course materials). ThePalo Alto Networks Certified XDR Engineer datasheetincludes “detection engineering” as a key exam topic, encompassing BIOC and prevention rule configuration.
[References:, Palo Alto Networks Cortex XDR Documentation Portal:https://docs-cortex.paloaltonetworks.com/, EDU-260: Cortex XDR Prevention and Deployment Course Objectives, Palo Alto Networks Certified XDR Engineer Datasheet:https://www.paloaltonetworks.com/services/education/certification#xdr-engineer, ]
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