Ensuring ongoing endpoint security compliance across diverse, hybrid IT infrastructures poses a continual operational challenge, especially in enterprise Linux systems, where manual verification methods are difficult to scale and prone to inconsistency. This study offers an empirical assessment of an automated methodology for monitoring endpoint compliance and security, applied within a mid-sized IT consulting firm. The suggested methodology incorporates automated compliance scanning, malware detection, endpoint verification, and remediation utilising open-source technology, all orchestrated through centralised automation and reporting systems. The evaluation follows an observational comparative methodology, contrasting manual compliance operations with automated enforcement across 60 Linux endpoints (30 Fedora and 30 Ubuntu systems) over two equivalent eight-week operational periods. The analysis emphasises operational parameters such as administrative workload, configuration uniformity, and audit preparedness. The findings demonstrate that automation reduced manual compliance-related tasks by roughly 70–80%, enhanced configuration consistency across endpoints through continuous enforcement, and enabled automated production of audit-ready compliance reports. The findings provide concrete evidence that operational security automation can markedly improve endpoint compliance management in business Linux and hybrid IT environments.
Morić et al. (Thu,) studied this question.