
M365/Azure Engineer
Securities and Exchange CommissionThe Office of Information Technology is seeking applicants for their IT Specialist (INFOSEC) (M365/Azure Engineer) position. As a M365/Azure Engineer, you will be supporting Microsoft Purview compliance and governance across
SEC M365
tenants by managing DLP, retention, sensitivity labeling, eDiscovery, and audit logging configurations. Ensuring secure, compliant data handling and partnering with security, legal, and engineering teams to maintain regulatory and operational oversight.In this role as a M365/Azure Engineer, you will be responsible for: Managing Purview DLP policies, sensitivity labels, and retention configurations to meet SEC compliance and governancerequirements. Reviewing and analyzing Purview audit logs to identify unusual activity, support investigations, and meet security and reporting obligations. Administering Purview eDiscovery cases, legal holds, and permissions to support legal, FOIA, and investigative workflows. Coordinating with security and operations teams to respond to compliance alerts, user-risk events, and policy enforcement actions. Maintaining Purview governance configurations across M365 tenants by validating policy posture, monitoring enforcement, and documenting changes.
Opens the company's application page
Listed via
USAJobs
usajobs.gov
Similar roles
Design & Tech
Related reads from TCHNX

The Quiet Revolution in Local-First Software
As major platforms face outages and data breaches, a new generation of developers is building applications that prioritise local data storage and peer-to-peer sync, challenging the cloud-first orthodoxy that's dominated tech for two decades.

The Quiet Revolution in Edge AI: Why Your Next Computer Might Not Need the Cloud
As neural processing units become standard in consumer devices, we're witnessing a fundamental shift in how AI applications work. Local processing is no longer a fallback; it's becoming the preferred architecture.

The Rise of AI-Assisted Code Generation 2: Are Developers Becoming Prompt Engineers?
As AI coding assistants reshape software development, the industry grapples with a fundamental question: is writing code giving way to writing prompts? We examine how London's tech scene is adapting to this seismic shift.

