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| Tags: distribution, expansion, list, prevent |
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#1
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We're running Exchange 2003 and Outlook 2003 in an educational
environment (high school). We have server-based distribution lists established for a variety of faculty purposes, and don't want the students to be able to send messages to these lists. We have the mail-enabled groups set in the Active Directory to accept messages from everyone, except the members of another group we created called "No Exchange Distribution Lists." To this last group, we've added all the students' accounts. So, the students are successfully blocked from composing messages to this group directly ... but I think we've found 2 flaws in this approach: 1) A student using the Outlook Desktop Client can add the group to the TO field of a message, and then click the + beside the group name to expand the list. At that point, it's no longer a message to the group, but instead is a message to a whole lot of individuals. In essence, our "rule" is bypassed. The only thing that would stop the message from being delivered at that point is our restriction on the maximum number of recipients to whom students can compose messages. Am I missing something here? Is there a way to prevent the distribution list from being expanded? Is there a better way to restrict these student users from sending messages to the faculty distribution lists? FYI: I don't particularly want to hide the distribution lists from the Global Address List 2) Further, what's to stop a student from inspecting the Email Addresses tab in the GAL for the distribution list's entry, and determining the SMTP-based email address for the list ) and then sending a message from his personal, non-Exchange email account? I have a thought on this one. Should I configure the list to only accept messages from Authenticated Users (a checkbox available in the Active Directory)? This will solve this problem, right? Thanks! Joe |
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#2
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One of the options in AD for the DL is to hide its membership.
And, yes, you should allow the DLs to accept messages only from authenticated users. BTW, neither of these is really an OUtlook question. Exchange admin issues are discussed in the microsoft.public.exchange.admin group. -- Sue Mosher, Outlook MVP Author of Configuring Microsoft Outlook 2003 http://www.turtleflock.com/olconfig/index.htm and Microsoft Outlook Programming - Jumpstart for Administrators, Power Users, and Developers http://www.outlookcode.com/jumpstart.aspx wrote in message ups.com... We're running Exchange 2003 and Outlook 2003 in an educational environment (high school). We have server-based distribution lists established for a variety of faculty purposes, and don't want the students to be able to send messages to these lists. We have the mail-enabled groups set in the Active Directory to accept messages from everyone, except the members of another group we created called "No Exchange Distribution Lists." To this last group, we've added all the students' accounts. So, the students are successfully blocked from composing messages to this group directly ... but I think we've found 2 flaws in this approach: 1) A student using the Outlook Desktop Client can add the group to the TO field of a message, and then click the + beside the group name to expand the list. At that point, it's no longer a message to the group, but instead is a message to a whole lot of individuals. In essence, our "rule" is bypassed. The only thing that would stop the message from being delivered at that point is our restriction on the maximum number of recipients to whom students can compose messages. Am I missing something here? Is there a way to prevent the distribution list from being expanded? Is there a better way to restrict these student users from sending messages to the faculty distribution lists? FYI: I don't particularly want to hide the distribution lists from the Global Address List 2) Further, what's to stop a student from inspecting the Email Addresses tab in the GAL for the distribution list's entry, and determining the SMTP-based email address for the list ) and then sending a message from his personal, non-Exchange email account? I have a thought on this one. Should I configure the list to only accept messages from Authenticated Users (a checkbox available in the Active Directory)? This will solve this problem, right? Thanks! Joe |
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