A security team wants to limit access to specific services or actions in all of the team’s AWS accounts. All accounts belong to a large organization in AWS Organizations The solution must be scalable and there must be a single point where permissions can be maintained.
What should a solutions architect do to accomplish this?
A . Create an ACL to provide access to the services or actions.
B . Create a security group to allow accounts and attach it to user groups
C . Create cross-account roles in each account to deny access to the services or actions.
D . Create a service control policy in the root organizational unit to deny access to the services or actions
Answer: D
Explanation:
https://docs.aws.amazon.com/organizations/latest/userguide/orgs_manage_policies_scp.html.
Service Control Policy concepts
SCPs offer central access controls for all IAM entities in your accounts. You can use them to enforce the permissions you want everyone in your business to follow. Using SCPs, you can give your developers more freedom to manage their own permissions because you know they can only operate within the boundaries you define.
You create and apply SCPs through AWS Organizations. When you create an organization, AWS Organizations automatically creates a root, which forms the parent container for all the accounts in your organization. Inside the root, you can group accounts in your organization into organizational units (OUs) to simplify management of these accounts. You can create multiple OUs within a single organization, and you can create OUs within other OUs to form a hierarchical structure. You can attach SCPs to the organization root, OUs, and individual accounts. SCPs attached to the root and OUs apply to all OUs and accounts inside of them.
SCPs use the AWS Identity and Access Management (IAM) policy language; however, they do not grant permissions. SCPs enable you set permission guardrails by defining the maximum available permissions for IAM entities in an account. If a SCP denies an action for an account, none of the entities in the account can take that action, even if their IAM permissions allow them to do so. The guardrails set in SCPs apply to all IAM entities in the account, which include all users, roles, and the account root user.
https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/security/how-to-use-service-control-policies-to-set-permission-guardrails-across-accounts-in-your-aws-organization/#:~:text=Central%20security%20administrators%20use%20service,users%20and%20roles)%20adhere%20to.&text=Now%2C%20using%20SCPs%2C%20you%20can,your%20organization%20or%20organizational%20unit.
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