Security for Confluence Data Center Documentation
Add extra security to your Confluence workflow. Scan pages and blog posts for leaked passwords, private keys, cloud credentials, etc.
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Overview
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Built-In Scanning Rules
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Security Analysis: Viewing scan results for a space
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The Soteri Dashboard: Viewing Confluence's overall security status
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Granting Access to Additional Users and Groups
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Hiding false positives, revoked credentials, etc.
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Exporting Findings
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Enabling and Disabling Scanning Rules
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Defining Custom Detection Rules
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Automatically Scanning Content
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Email notifications for content authors
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Viewing Audited Events
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Scanning Files Attached to Pages
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Scanning Comments
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REST API For Scripting and Automation
- What content can Security for Confluence Scan?
- What do I do if a security scan finds a secret?
- How do I make sure all spaces are scanned, remain scanned, and remain secret-free?
- Accessing the Settings Page
- What is the GENERIC_PASSWORD rule and why is it disabled by default?
- Scan Performance
- Why isn't Security for Confluence finding my passwords?
- Why are some scanning rules disabled by default?
- Enabling debug logging
- Creating support zips
- Why are newline matchers not allowed in custom rules?
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Security for Confluence Data Center Cookbook
Security for Confluence Data Center Documentation