Security for Confluence Cloud Documentation
Add extra security to your Confluence workflow. Scan pages and blog posts for leaked passwords, private keys, cloud credentials, etc.
-
Overview
-
Built-In Scanning Rules
-
Security Analysis: Viewing scan results for a space
-
The Soteri Dashboard: Viewing Confluence's overall security status
-
Granting Access to Additional Users and Groups
-
Automatically Scanning Content
-
Scanning Comments
-
Hiding false positives, revoked credentials, etc.
-
Enabling and Disabling Global Detection Rules
-
Defining Custom Detection Rules
-
Advanced AI Scanning
-
Exporting Findings
-
Viewing Audited Events
-
Webhook Integration
- What content can Security for Confluence scan?
- What do I do if a security scan finds a secret?
- Accessing the Settings Page
- What is the GENERIC_PASSWORD rule and why is it disabled by default?
- Why are some scanning rules disabled by default?
- Why isn't Security for Confluence finding my passwords?
- Why are newline matchers not allowed in custom rules?
- Fixing scan results that appear incomplete
-
Release Notes
Security for Confluence Cloud Documentation