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Microsoft AZ-500 Exam - Topic 2 Question 95 Discussion

Actual exam question for Microsoft's AZ-500 exam
Question #: 95
Topic #: 2
[All AZ-500 Questions]

You have an Azure resource group that contains 100 virtual machines.

You have an initiative named Initiative1 that contains multiple policy definitions. Initiative1 is assigned to the resource group.

You need to identify which resources do NOT match the policy definitions.

What should you do?

Show Suggested Answer Hide Answer
Suggested Answer: A

https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/governance/policy/how-to/get-compliance-data#portal

Contribute your Thoughts:

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Wilbert
15 days ago
Wait, how does C) help with policy compliance?
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Verdell
20 days ago
I think B) could work too, but not as effective.
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Cherilyn
25 days ago
A) is the right choice for compliance checks.
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Marleen
1 month ago
Option D doesn't seem relevant, I don't think I need to look at the Assignments.
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Novella
1 month ago
Haha, I bet the person who wrote this question is an Azure expert, they really know their stuff!
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Elouise
1 month ago
Option A seems like the way to go, the Regulatory compliance assessment should give me the info I need.
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Yolande
2 months ago
Hmm, I'm not sure if the Secure Score in Option C would show the non-compliant resources.
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Kaycee
2 months ago
Option B looks good, I can view the compliance status from the Policy blade.
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Dorinda
2 months ago
I definitely recall that the Regulatory compliance assessment gives insights into compliance, but I’m not entirely sure if it shows non-compliant resources specifically.
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Rashad
2 months ago
I’m a bit confused about whether to check the Compliance section or the Assignments section in Azure AD. Both seem relevant to policies.
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Tora
2 months ago
I practiced a similar question where we had to find non-compliant resources, and I feel like the Policy blade is the right place to look.
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Marta
2 months ago
I think I remember something about checking compliance in Azure Security Center, but I'm not sure if it's the Regulatory compliance assessment or the Secure Score.
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Cory
3 months ago
I'm pretty confident that Option B is the right answer here. The question is specifically asking about identifying resources that don't match policy definitions, and the Policy blade in the Azure Active Directory admin center is where you can view compliance information for policy assignments.
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Emily
3 months ago
I think option A is the best choice. Security Center gives clear compliance insights.
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Lang
3 months ago
Okay, let me think this through. We have an Azure resource group with 100 VMs, and an initiative named Initiative1 that is assigned to the resource group. We need to identify which resources don't match the policy definitions in Initiative1. I think Option B, viewing the Compliance section in the Policy blade, would be the best way to do that.
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Daniela
4 months ago
Hmm, I'm a bit confused. The question mentions Azure resource groups and virtual machines, but the answer choices seem to be focused on Azure Security Center and Azure Active Directory. I'm not sure how those are related to the problem.
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Alyssa
4 months ago
I think I would start by looking at the Policy blade in the Azure Active Directory admin center, since the question mentions policy definitions and assignments. Option D seems like the most relevant choice there.
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Stefany
3 months ago
I agree, checking the Policy blade makes sense.
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Sylvia
3 months ago
I think compliance assessments are key here.
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