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How to Configure SCEP for Secure Enterprise WiFi and BYOD Provisioning

This technical guide explains how to configure the Simple Certificate Enrollment Protocol (SCEP) to automate secure 802.1X enterprise WiFi authentication and BYOD provisioning. It provides network architects and IT managers with a definitive deployment sequence, real-world implementation scenarios from hospitality and retail, and risk mitigation strategies to eliminate vulnerable pre-shared keys and MAC Authentication Bypass from enterprise networks.

📖 8 min read📝 1,754 words🔧 2 worked examples4 practice questions📚 10 key definitions

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Welcome to this technical briefing from Purple. I am your host, and today we are diving deep into the configuration of SCEP for secure enterprise WiFi and BYOD provisioning. For IT managers, network architects, and CTOs operating in hospitality, retail, and public sectors, managing network access is a constant balancing act between security and operational efficiency. You are dealing with hundreds, sometimes thousands of devices connecting to your network every day. Staff smartphones, contractor laptops, point-of-sale tablets. And the old ways of handling this are simply not good enough anymore. Relying on Pre-Shared Keys, or PSKs, for staff and BYOD WiFi is a security vulnerability waiting to be exploited. A shared password, once compromised, gives anyone access to your network. And MAC Authentication Bypass, or MAB, is no better. Modern smartphones use randomised MAC addresses by default, which breaks MAB entirely, and MAC addresses can be spoofed in seconds. Modern network architecture demands 802.1X authentication using EAP-TLS. This ensures every device is cryptographically verified before it touches the network. But here is the challenge: how do you distribute unique client certificates to thousands of unmanaged devices without overwhelming your helpdesk? The answer is the Simple Certificate Enrollment Protocol, or SCEP. Let us start with the architecture. SCEP is the industry standard for enterprise device enrollment, defined in RFC 8894. It has been around since 1999, originally created by VeriSign, and it has stood the test of time because it solves a genuinely hard problem elegantly. In a SCEP workflow, the device generates its own private and public key pair locally. It creates a Certificate Signing Request, or CSR, and sends it via a Network Device Enrollment Service, known as NDES, to your Certificate Authority, or CA. The CA validates the request and returns the signed public certificate to the device. The critical security advantage here is that the private key never leaves the device. It is generated locally and stored in the device's hardware secure enclave. On a Windows laptop, that is the Trusted Platform Module, or TPM. On an iPhone, it is the Secure Enclave. The private key is never transmitted across the network. This is what makes SCEP vastly superior to alternatives like PKCS for network authentication, where the CA generates the key pair centrally and transmits it to the device. Now, let us talk about BYOD. This is where it gets genuinely interesting from an operational standpoint. You want staff to be able to use their personal devices to access internal tools, but you do not want to force them to enrol in your corporate MDM. That is a privacy concern, and it meets strong resistance from staff. The solution is a self-service onboarding portal. Here is how it works. The user connects their personal device to a dedicated provisioning SSID. This network is a walled garden, restricting access to everything except the onboarding portal and your identity provider. The user authenticates using their corporate credentials, typically via SAML integration with Microsoft Entra ID, Okta, or Google Workspace. Upon successful authentication, the system generates a unique, device-specific client certificate via SCEP. A configuration profile is pushed to the device containing the certificate, the root CA certificate, and the network settings. The device then automatically connects to the secure corporate SSID using EAP-TLS. It is seamless for the user and secure for the enterprise. They do not need to know anything about certificates or 802.1X. They just log in once and they are connected. Now, let us walk through the implementation in detail. The deployment sequence is critical, and getting it wrong is the most common cause of failure. Step one: deploy the Trusted Root Certificate. Before any device can request a client certificate or trust your RADIUS server, it must trust the issuing Certificate Authority. Export your Root CA certificate as a .cer file and deploy it to your target device groups. This step is non-negotiable. Without it, the entire chain fails. Step two: configure the SCEP Certificate Profile. This instructs devices on how to obtain their client certificate. You need to configure the subject name format. For user-driven authentication, the standard is CN equals UserPrincipalName. For device authentication, use CN equals the Azure AD Device ID. Set the key usage to digital signature and key encipherment. Under extended key usage, specify Client Authentication with the OID 1.3.6.1.5.5.7.3.2. Link this profile to the Trusted Root certificate profile from step one. And provide the external URL of your NDES server. Step three: deploy the 802.1X WiFi Profile. This ties the certificates to the network SSID. Enter the network name exactly as it is broadcast by your access points. Set the security type to WPA2-Enterprise or WPA3-Enterprise. Set the EAP type to EAP-TLS. Select the SCEP certificate profile as the client authentication certificate. And specify the Trusted Root certificate for server validation. This sequence is the most important thing to remember from this entire briefing. Trust, then certificate, then WiFi. In that order, every time. Now let me walk you through some best practices that will save you significant pain in production. First, publish your NDES server via Azure AD Application Proxy. The NDES server must be accessible from the internet to allow remote devices to provision certificates before they arrive on-site. But exposing an internal server directly to the internet is a significant security risk. Application Proxy gives you secure remote access without opening inbound firewall ports. Second, implement short-lived certificates for BYOD devices. Instead of a certificate valid for three years, issue certificates valid for 90 days. When the certificate expires, the user must re-authenticate through the onboarding portal. This naturally prunes stale devices from the network. A device that has not been used in 90 days simply drops off. No manual cleanup required. Third, and this is absolutely critical, configure your RADIUS server to enforce strict Certificate Revocation List checking. When an employee leaves the organisation, disabling their Active Directory account may not immediately revoke their WiFi access if their client certificate remains valid. Your RADIUS server must check the CRL before granting access. Ensure your CRL Distribution Points are highly available. If the RADIUS server cannot reach the CRL, authentication fails for everyone. That is a widespread outage. Now let us look at some common failure modes and how to avoid them. The most frequent issue is the WiFi profile failing to apply. The device receives the Trusted Root and SCEP certificates, but the WiFi profile shows as Error in the MDM console. Nine times out of ten, this is a group targeting mismatch. If the SCEP profile is assigned to a User Group, but the WiFi profile is assigned to a Device Group, the MDM cannot resolve the dependency. Audit your assignments. Ensure all three profiles target the exact same group. The second common issue is NDES 403 Forbidden errors. Devices fail to retrieve the SCEP certificate, and the NDES IIS logs show HTTP 403 errors. This is usually caused by the connector service account lacking the necessary permissions on the certificate template, or a firewall blocking the specific query string parameters used by SCEP. Verify that the connector account has Read and Enroll permissions on the CA template. Check your firewall logs to ensure URLs containing the operation equals GetCACaps parameter are not being blocked. Let me give you two real-world scenarios to illustrate how this plays out in practice. Scenario one: a 200-room hotel with 50 housekeeping staff using personal smartphones to access the scheduling app. The IT manager wants to avoid full MDM enrolment to respect staff privacy. The solution is a self-service portal integrated with Microsoft Entra ID. Staff connect to the provisioning SSID, log in with their Entra ID credentials, and download a SCEP profile. The SCEP server issues a 30-day client certificate directly to the device. The device connects to the Staff WiFi SSID using EAP-TLS. The RADIUS server assigns these devices to a restricted VLAN that only allows access to the scheduling app. When a staff member resigns, their Entra ID account is disabled, and the RADIUS server instantly denies network access. Scenario two: a national retail chain with 500 stores deploying secure WiFi for corporate-owned point-of-sale tablets. The network architect needs to ensure that even if a tablet is stolen, the credentials cannot be extracted. The solution is Microsoft Intune deploying certificates via SCEP. Intune pushes the Trusted Root certificate, followed by a SCEP profile that instructs the tablet to generate its own private key in its hardware secure enclave. The tablet submits a CSR to the NDES server, receives the client certificate, and connects to the Retail POS SSID using EAP-TLS. Because the private key is generated locally and never transmitted, a stolen tablet's credentials cannot be used elsewhere. This satisfies PCI DSS compliance requirements. Now, let us talk about the business case. Transitioning to SCEP 802.1X certificate deployment delivers measurable returns across security and operations. Password-based WiFi generates a significant volume of helpdesk tickets. Password expirations, lockouts, typos. Certificate-based authentication is invisible to the user. Devices connect automatically. This typically reduces WiFi-related helpdesk volume by 70%. That is a material reduction in operational cost. EAP-TLS eliminates the risk of credential harvesting and Man-in-the-Middle attacks. This is critical for compliance with PCI DSS in retail environments and GDPR across all sectors. The cost of a data breach far exceeds the cost of deploying a proper PKI infrastructure. And for organisations already running Purple's Guest WiFi and analytics platform, extending secure onboarding to staff BYOD devices provides a unified network management strategy. Purple's hardware-agnostic cloud overlay integrates with Cisco Meraki, HPE Aruba, Ruckus, Juniper Mist, Ubiquiti UniFi, Cambium, Extreme, and Fortinet, so you are not locked into a single hardware vendor. Purple operates across 80,000 live venues and has processed 440 million logins in 2024, holding ISO 27001, GDPR, CCPA, and Cyber Essentials certifications. Let me close with a rapid-fire summary of the key decisions you need to make. Should you use SCEP or PKCS? Use SCEP for WiFi authentication. The private key stays on the device. Use PKCS only for email encryption where key escrow is required. How long should certificates be valid? 90 days for BYOD. One to two years for corporate-managed devices. Should you use user or device targeting in your MDM? Use device targeting for corporate devices that need to connect before user login. Use user targeting for BYOD where the certificate should be tied to the individual. How do you handle Android fragmentation? Use Passpoint, also known as Hotspot 2.0, where possible. It provides a consistent connection experience across Android manufacturers. And finally, what is the single most important thing to get right? CRL checking on your RADIUS server. Without it, a revoked certificate can still grant network access. That is the end of today's briefing. If you want to go deeper on any of these topics, Purple's technical guides on enterprise WiFi security and EAP-TLS certificate authentication are available on the Purple website at purple.ai. Thank you for listening.

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Executive summary

For enterprise venues operating across hospitality, retail, and public sectors, relying on pre-shared keys (PSKs) or MAC Authentication Bypass (MAB) for staff and BYOD WiFi is a security liability. Modern network architecture demands 802.1X authentication using EAP-TLS (Extensible Authentication Protocol-Transport Layer Security), ensuring every device is cryptographically verified before it accesses the network. The operational challenge is distributing unique client certificates to thousands of unmanaged devices without burying your IT helpdesk in support tickets.

Simple Certificate Enrollment Protocol (SCEP), defined in RFC 8894, solves this distribution problem through automated certificate lifecycle management. By leveraging SCEP, IT teams push trusted root and client certificates to endpoints, ensuring the private key never leaves the device. This guide provides a definitive architectural blueprint and step-by-step implementation strategy for SCEP WiFi certificate deployment. We cover the critical deployment sequence required for success, real-world scenarios from hospitality and retail, and risk mitigation strategies to ensure your Guest WiFi and corporate networks remain secure and performant.

Technical deep-dive: SCEP architecture

SCEP is the industry standard for enterprise device enrollment, created by VeriSign and published as an IETF Internet Draft in 1999. It automates the issuance of X.509 certificates within a Public Key Infrastructure (PKI) environment, removing the need for manual certificate management at scale.

scep_architecture_overview.png

In a SCEP workflow, the device generates its own private and public key pair locally. It creates a Certificate Signing Request (CSR) and sends it via a Network Device Enrollment Service (NDES) server to your Certificate Authority (CA). The CA validates the request using a shared secret and returns the signed public certificate to the device. The critical security advantage is that the private key never leaves the device. It is generated locally and stored in the device's hardware secure enclave - the Trusted Platform Module (TPM) on Windows, or the Secure Enclave on iOS. This makes SCEP the strongly recommended approach for 802.1X authentication, compared to PKCS (Public Key Cryptography Standards) where the CA generates the key pair centrally and transmits it over the network.

The four steps of SCEP certificate enrollment are as follows. First, the device connects to the SCEP endpoint URL hosted by the NDES server. Second, the device presents a SCEP shared secret - either a static password or a dynamic challenge generated by the MDM platform - to authenticate the enrollment request. Third, the device generates a CSR containing its public key and identity information. Fourth, the CA validates the CSR and issues the signed X.509 certificate, which is returned to the device.

SCEP versus PKCS: choosing the right mechanism

When designing your certificate deployment strategy, the choice between SCEP and PKCS has direct security implications. The table below summarises the key differences.

Attribute SCEP PKCS
Private key generation On the device (secure enclave) On the CA server
Private key transmission Never transmitted Transmitted over the network
Infrastructure requirement NDES server required No NDES required
Best fit WiFi and VPN authentication S/MIME email encryption
Security posture for 802.1X Recommended Not recommended

For SCEP for enterprise WiFi, always choose SCEP. The private key remaining on the device is the fundamental security property that makes certificate-based 802.1X authentication superior to any credential-based method.

BYOD self-service onboarding flow

The foundation of secure BYOD onboarding is transitioning from legacy authentication to EAP-TLS without requiring full Mobile Device Management (MDM) enrolment. Forcing staff to enrol personal smartphones into a corporate MDM raises legitimate privacy concerns and meets strong resistance. A self-service onboarding portal resolves this.

The user connects their personal device to a dedicated provisioning SSID, which acts as a walled garden restricting access to the onboarding portal and identity provider only. The user authenticates via SAML or OAuth integration with Microsoft Entra ID, Okta, or Google Workspace. Upon successful authentication, the system generates a unique, device-specific client certificate via SCEP. A configuration profile - an Apple .mobileconfig file or an Android Passpoint profile - is pushed to the device. The device then automatically connects to the secure corporate SSID using EAP-TLS. The user never needs to know anything about certificates or 802.1X.

Implementation guide: the deployment sequence

Successfully configuring SCEP for 802.1X requires strict adherence to a specific deployment sequence. Trust must be established before authentication can be configured. Deviating from this order is the most common cause of deployment failure.

Step 1: Deploy the Trusted Root Certificate. Before any device can request a client certificate or trust your RADIUS server, it must trust the issuing Certificate Authority. Export your Root CA certificate (and any Intermediate CA certificates) as .cer files. Deploy this profile to your target device groups via your MDM platform. This step is non-negotiable.

Step 2: Configure the SCEP Certificate Profile. This instructs devices on how to obtain their client certificate. Configure the subject name format - for user-driven authentication, CN={{UserPrincipalName}} is standard; for device authentication, use CN={{AAD_Device_ID}}. Set the key usage to Digital signature and Key encipherment. Under extended key usage, specify Client Authentication (OID: 1.3.6.1.5.5.7.3.2). Link this profile to the Trusted Root certificate profile from Step 1. Provide the external URL of your NDES server.

Step 3: Deploy the 802.1X WiFi Profile. Push the WiFi configuration that ties the certificates to the network SSID. Enter the network name exactly as broadcast by your access points. Set the security type to WPA2-Enterprise or WPA3-Enterprise. Set the EAP type to EAP-TLS. Select the SCEP certificate profile as the client authentication certificate. Specify the Trusted Root certificate for server validation to ensure the device only connects to your legitimate RADIUS server.

This sequence applies across all supported hardware platforms: Cisco Meraki, HPE Aruba, Ruckus, Juniper Mist, Ubiquiti UniFi, Cambium, Extreme, and Fortinet. Purple's hardware-agnostic cloud overlay integrates with all of these, meaning your certificate infrastructure is not tied to a single hardware vendor.

Best practices

Publish NDES via Azure AD Application Proxy. The NDES server must be accessible from the internet to allow remote devices to provision certificates before arriving on-site. Exposing an internal server directly to the internet is a significant security risk. Publishing via Azure AD Application Proxy provides secure remote access without opening inbound firewall ports and allows you to apply Conditional Access policies to the enrollment flow.

Issue short-lived certificates for BYOD. Because BYOD devices are unmanaged, the risk of a compromised device remaining on the network is higher. Issue certificates valid for 90 days rather than multiple years. When the certificate expires, the user must re-authenticate through the onboarding portal. This naturally prunes stale devices from the network without manual IT intervention.

Enforce strict CRL checking on the RADIUS server. Certificate deployment is only half the security equation. If an employee is terminated, disabling their Active Directory account may not immediately revoke their WiFi access if their client certificate remains valid. Configure your RADIUS server to enforce strict Certificate Revocation List (CRL) checking. Ensure your CRL Distribution Points (CDPs) are highly available. If the RADIUS server cannot reach the CRL, authentication fails for all users - a widespread outage.

Segment BYOD onto a dedicated VLAN. BYOD devices are unmanaged. You do not control their OS updates, antivirus status, or installed applications. Place BYOD devices on a dedicated VLAN that provides internet access and restricted access only to the specific internal applications required for the employee's role. Never place BYOD devices on the same VLAN as corporate servers or managed devices.

byod_vs_psk_comparison.png

Troubleshooting and risk mitigation

WiFi profile fails to apply. The device receives the Trusted Root and SCEP certificates, but the WiFi profile shows as 'Error' in the MDM console. This is almost always caused by a group targeting mismatch. If the SCEP profile is assigned to a User Group but the WiFi profile is assigned to a Device Group, the MDM cannot resolve the dependency. Audit your assignments and ensure the Trusted Root, SCEP, and WiFi profiles all target the exact same Azure AD group.

NDES 403 Forbidden errors. Devices fail to retrieve the SCEP certificate, and the NDES IIS logs show HTTP 403 errors. The connector service account likely lacks the necessary permissions on the certificate template, or your firewall is blocking the specific query string parameters used by SCEP. Verify that the connector account has 'Read' and 'Enroll' permissions on the CA template. Check firewall logs to ensure URLs containing ?operation=GetCACaps are not being blocked.

Android fragmentation. Apple iOS devices handle .mobileconfig profiles consistently. Android is highly fragmented - different manufacturers and OS versions handle WiFi profiles and certificate installation differently. Provide clear, OS-specific instructions on the onboarding portal. Using Passpoint (Hotspot 2.0) significantly improves the Android experience by providing a consistent connection flow across manufacturers.

Certificate revocation delays. When an employee leaves, their access must be revoked immediately. Disabling their IdP account is the first step, but the RADIUS server must also verify the certificate's status. Configure your RADIUS server to use the Online Certificate Status Protocol (OCSP) in addition to CRL checking. OCSP provides real-time revocation status rather than relying on a periodically updated list.

ROI and business impact

Transitioning to SCEP 802.1X certificate deployment delivers measurable returns across security and operations. Password-based WiFi generates a significant volume of helpdesk tickets from password expirations, lockouts, and typos. Certificate-based authentication is invisible to the user - devices connect automatically. This typically reduces WiFi-related helpdesk volume by 70%, freeing IT staff to focus on strategic work.

EAP-TLS eliminates the risk of credential harvesting and Man-in-the-Middle (MitM) attacks. This is critical for compliance with PCI DSS in Retail environments and GDPR across all sectors. In Hospitality , where staff handle payment data and guest personal information, the cost of a data breach far exceeds the cost of deploying a proper PKI infrastructure. For Transport operators and Healthcare venues, the same compliance drivers apply.

For venues already utilising Purple's Guest WiFi and WiFi Analytics platform, extending secure onboarding to staff BYOD devices provides a unified, robust network management strategy. Purple operates across 80,000+ live venues and has processed 440 million logins in 2024 (Purple internal data), holding ISO 27001, GDPR, CCPA, and Cyber Essentials certifications. Our SecurePass and Shield security add-ons integrate directly with the certificate-based authentication architecture described in this guide.

For a broader view of enterprise network security, consult our Enterprise WiFi Security: A Complete Guide for 2026 . For GDPR compliance considerations specific to network administrators, see The Network Administrator's Guide to GDPR and Guest Data Privacy Compliance .

Key Definitions

SCEP (Simple Certificate Enrollment Protocol)

A protocol defined in RFC 8894 that automates the issuance of X.509 digital certificates to devices within a PKI environment. The device generates its own private key locally, which never leaves the device.

Used to deploy WiFi authentication certificates to corporate and BYOD devices at scale without manual IT intervention. The industry standard for 802.1X certificate provisioning.

802.1X

An IEEE standard (IEEE Std 802.1X-2020) for port-based network access control. It provides an authentication mechanism to devices wishing to attach to a LAN or WLAN before they are granted access to network resources.

The foundation of secure enterprise WiFi, replacing vulnerable pre-shared keys. Requires a RADIUS server, a supplicant on the client device, and an authenticator on the access point.

EAP-TLS (Extensible Authentication Protocol-Transport Layer Security)

An authentication framework that requires both the server and the client to present valid digital certificates. Provides mutual authentication, ensuring the device trusts the network and the network trusts the device.

The most secure method for 802.1X authentication. Eliminates credential theft and Man-in-the-Middle attacks. The target authentication protocol that SCEP certificate deployment is designed to enable.

NDES (Network Device Enrollment Service)

A Microsoft Windows Server role that acts as a bridge, allowing devices without domain credentials to obtain certificates from an Active Directory Certificate Services CA via SCEP.

A required infrastructure component when implementing SCEP with Microsoft Intune. Should be published via Azure AD Application Proxy to allow secure remote certificate provisioning.

BYOD (Bring Your Own Device)

The practice of allowing employees to use their personal smartphones, tablets, or laptops to access enterprise networks and applications.

Requires careful network segmentation and secure onboarding to prevent unmanaged devices from compromising the corporate network. Full MDM enrolment is often impractical for personal devices due to privacy concerns.

CRL (Certificate Revocation List)

A list published by the Certificate Authority containing the serial numbers of certificates that have been revoked before their expiration date.

Must be checked by the RADIUS server during every authentication attempt to ensure terminated employees or compromised devices cannot access the network. CRL Distribution Points must be highly available.

CSR (Certificate Signing Request)

A message generated by a device and sent to a Certificate Authority to apply for a digital identity certificate. Contains the device's public key and identity information.

Generated by the device during the SCEP process. The private key used to sign the CSR remains on the device and is never transmitted.

RADIUS (Remote Authentication Dial-In User Service)

A networking protocol that provides centralised Authentication, Authorisation, and Accounting (AAA) management for users and devices connecting to a network.

The server that validates the client certificate during 802.1X authentication and grants or denies network access. Must be configured to enforce strict CRL or OCSP checking.

PKCS (Public Key Cryptography Standards)

A set of standards where both the public and private keys are generated by the Certificate Authority and then securely delivered to the endpoint.

Less suitable than SCEP for WiFi authentication because the private key is transmitted over the network. Better suited for S/MIME email encryption where key escrow is required.

OCSP (Online Certificate Status Protocol)

A protocol that provides real-time certificate revocation status, as an alternative to the periodically updated CRL.

Preferred over CRL for high-security environments because it provides instant revocation status rather than relying on a list that may be hours old.

Worked Examples

A 200-room hotel needs to provide secure WiFi access for 50 housekeeping staff using their personal smartphones (BYOD) to access the housekeeping scheduling app. The IT manager wants to avoid full MDM enrolment to respect staff privacy, but needs to ensure access is revoked immediately when a staff member resigns.

The hotel deploys a self-service onboarding portal integrated with Microsoft Entra ID. Staff connect to an open provisioning SSID, authenticate with their Entra ID credentials, and download a SCEP profile. The SCEP server issues a 30-day client certificate directly to the device, with the private key generated and stored locally on the smartphone's secure enclave. The device automatically connects to the 'Staff_WiFi' SSID using EAP-TLS. The RADIUS server assigns these devices to a restricted VLAN that permits access only to the scheduling app and the internet. When a staff member resigns, their Entra ID account is disabled. The RADIUS server, configured for strict CRL checking, denies network access at the next authentication attempt. The 30-day certificate validity ensures that even if CRL checking were delayed, access would lapse within a month.

Examiner's Commentary: This approach balances security with staff privacy. By using SCEP via a captive portal rather than full MDM enrolment, the hotel avoids installing a management profile on personal devices. The 30-day certificate validity and strict CRL checking provide layered access control. The VLAN segmentation ensures that even a compromised BYOD device cannot reach corporate servers or payment systems.

A national retail chain with 500 stores needs to deploy secure WiFi for corporate-owned point-of-sale (POS) tablets running Windows. The network architect must ensure that even if a tablet is stolen, the network credentials cannot be extracted and used to access the corporate network from another device. PCI DSS compliance is mandatory.

The network architect configures Microsoft Intune to deploy certificates via SCEP. Intune pushes the Trusted Root certificate to the 'POS Devices' group, followed by a SCEP profile that instructs each tablet to generate its own private key in the Windows TPM. The tablet submits a CSR to the NDES server, receives the client certificate, and connects to the 'Retail_POS' SSID using WPA3-Enterprise and EAP-TLS. The RADIUS server authenticates the certificate and places the device on the isolated POS VLAN, which only permits traffic to the payment processor and inventory management system. All three Intune profiles - Trusted Root, SCEP, and WiFi - are assigned to the same 'POS Devices' device group to prevent dependency failures. NDES is published via Azure AD Application Proxy to allow certificate renewal without requiring the tablet to be on-site.

Examiner's Commentary: This is the optimal architecture for corporate devices in a PCI DSS environment. Because SCEP ensures the private key is generated locally in the TPM and never transmitted, a stolen tablet's credentials cannot be extracted and replayed from another device. The WPA3-Enterprise standard provides forward secrecy, ensuring that captured traffic cannot be decrypted retroactively. The VLAN isolation limits the blast radius of any compromised device to the POS network segment only.

Practice Questions

Q1. You are deploying a SCEP profile via Intune to a fleet of Windows laptops. The devices successfully receive the Trusted Root certificate, but the WiFi profile fails to apply and shows as 'Error' in the Intune console. The SCEP profile is assigned to the 'All Users' Azure AD group, while the WiFi profile is assigned to the 'Corporate Laptops' device group. What is the cause of the failure and how do you resolve it?

Hint: Consider the dependencies between the profiles and how Intune resolves group targeting when a profile depends on another profile.

View model answer

The failure is caused by a group targeting mismatch. Intune cannot resolve the dependency between the SCEP profile and the WiFi profile because they target different group types - one targets users and the other targets devices. To resolve this, audit all three profile assignments and ensure the Trusted Root, SCEP, and WiFi profiles are all deployed to the exact same Azure AD group. Choose either user targeting or device targeting consistently across all profiles.

Q2. A retail venue wants to secure its POS tablets. The IT director suggests using PKCS instead of SCEP because it simplifies infrastructure by removing the need for an NDES server. As the network architect, why should you recommend SCEP for 802.1X WiFi authentication, and under what circumstances would PKCS be the correct choice?

Hint: Think about where the private key is generated and stored in both protocols, and consider the security implications for network authentication versus email encryption.

View model answer

Recommend SCEP for 802.1X WiFi authentication because the private key is generated locally on the device and stored in its hardware secure enclave. The private key never leaves the device and is never transmitted across the network. If a tablet is stolen, the credentials cannot be extracted and used from another device. With PKCS, the CA generates the key pair centrally and transmits it to the device, introducing a transmission risk that is unacceptable for network authentication. PKCS is the correct choice only for S/MIME email encryption, where key escrow is required to allow encrypted emails to be decrypted if the original device is lost.

Q3. You are designing a BYOD onboarding portal for a 500-bed hospital. Clinical staff will use their personal smartphones to access non-critical internal apps such as the staff rota and internal messaging. You need to minimise the risk of stale devices remaining on the network after staff leave, without requiring manual IT intervention for each departure. What specific certificate configuration should you implement?

Hint: Consider the lifecycle of the certificate and how you can force devices to re-authenticate periodically without requiring IT to manually revoke each certificate.

View model answer

Implement short-lived certificates with a validity period of 30 to 90 days. When the certificate expires, the BYOD device is forced to re-authenticate through the captive portal using the staff member's corporate IdP credentials. If the staff member has left and their IdP account has been disabled, they cannot complete re-authentication and will not receive a new certificate. This naturally prunes stale devices from the network without requiring IT to manually revoke individual certificates. Combine this with OCSP checking on the RADIUS server to ensure immediate revocation when an account is disabled, providing defence in depth between certificate expiry cycles.

Q4. Your NDES server is returning HTTP 403 Forbidden errors for all SCEP certificate requests. The NDES server is accessible from the internet via Azure AD Application Proxy. What are the two most likely causes of this error and how do you diagnose each one?

Hint: Consider both the permissions on the certificate template and the network path between the device and the NDES server.

View model answer

The two most likely causes are: first, the Intune Certificate Connector service account lacks the necessary permissions on the CA certificate template. Verify that the service account has 'Read' and 'Enroll' permissions on the template in the CA console. Second, the firewall or Application Proxy is blocking the specific query string parameters used by SCEP. Check firewall and Application Proxy logs for requests containing parameters such as '?operation=GetCACaps' or '?operation=PKIOperation'. These are standard SCEP operations that must be permitted. If the Application Proxy is stripping query strings, adjust the pre-authentication settings to allow pass-through for the NDES URL path.

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