Paul,

Most likely the user has setup SMS-based notifications for their mailbox, and 
those specific sent items are calendar reminders sent via text message.

Dave

-- 
Dave W. Beauvais
Exchange and Office 365 Services Administrator
Ohio University Office of Information Technology


-----Original Message-----
From: listsad...@lists.myitforum.com [mailto:listsad...@lists.myitforum.com] On 
Behalf Of Maglinger, Paul
Sent: Tuesday, November 15, 2016 10:10
To: New Exchange List (exchange@lists.myITforum.com) 
<exchange@lists.myITforum.com>
Subject: [Exchange] What kind of Outlook icon is this?

We implemented a transport rule to keep certain areas of the company from 
auto-forwarding emails outside of the company.  Spot checking the results I 
find in the Sent Items emails going to what appears to be a mobile phone at 
"odd hours", indicating to me that someone has found a way to bypass this.  Has 
anyone seen this type of icon in Outlook and can give me an idea how they're 
getting around it?  I ran a Powershell script to find forwarding rules and it 
came up with 2, but those are not showing up in ECP.  The emails in the Sent 
Items appear to contain XML code.  The email contains:
<?xml version="1.0"?>
<CalendarNotificationContent 
xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"; 
xmlns:xsd="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema"; Version="1.0">
  <CalNotifType>Reminder</CalNotifType>
  <CalNotifTypeDesc>Appointment Reminder</CalNotifTypeDesc>
  <CalEvent>
    <DayOfWeekOfStartTime>Wednesday</DayOfWeekOfStartTime>
    <DateOfStartTime>11/16/2016</DateOfStartTime>
    <TimeOfStartTime>1:00 AM</TimeOfStartTime>
    <DayOfWeekOfEndTime>Thursday</DayOfWeekOfEndTime>
    <DateOfEndTime>11/17/2016</DateOfEndTime>
    <TimeOfEndTime>1:00 AM</TimeOfEndTime>
    <Subject>P41/8: Men's Converse End Panel</Subject>
    <Location />
  </CalEvent>
</CalendarNotificationContent>

A screen shot of the icon is attached.

Paul

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