Don't you have a tool to write or something? :p
 
Yeah, I know. It's cold in MI and you are stuck in the house. Can't do
anything "with shorts on" for the next couple of months ;)
 
You are right, though - as always. I just didn't feel the need to go into
that much details. Experience has taught me that it is much easier to get a
message across by making it as succinct as possible.
 
 
Sincerely,

D�j� Ak�m�l�f�, MCSE+M MCSA+M MCP+I
Microsoft MVP - Directory Services
www.readymaids.com - we know IT
www.akomolafe.com
Do you now realize that Today is the Tomorrow you were worried about
Yesterday?  -anon

________________________________

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] on behalf of joe
Sent: Tue 2/1/2005 12:28 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] OT: Exchange Mail Forwarding



> Don't disable the account. In fact, don't disable ANY mail-enabled
account.

I will nitpick you here and say you meant mailbox-enabled account.  :)

But even with that clarification I still disagree. Nothing wrong with
disabling a mailbox-enabled account, just do it properly. I.E. If you want a
resource account, you disable it, set the msuac=2 and set the msmas to SELF.
Then set the mailbox permissions themselves to whatever you need to
accomplish, give 100 people access, give five people access, whatever.


  joe



-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, February 01, 2005 2:49 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] OT: Exchange Mail Forwarding

>> I am not too happy with this solution as I believe there may be a way
>> to
set this up on the Exchange server itself.
You and a lot of others. But, this is what you are stuck with for the time
being.

>> I would like to disable the user's domain account for security
>> reasons
Don't disable the account. In fact, don't disable ANY mail-enabled account.
That creates problems for your Exchange. What you want to do is set a
complex password for terminated accounts. Use a password generator to create
random passwords that not even you can remember. When the user has been gone
longer than your corporate policies mandate, then archive the mailbox,
detach the mailbox, then disable or delete that account.

>>What are the commonly-accepted procedures for dealing with departing
users?
It depends. Your corporate policies dictate that. Do you have a policy that
says mailbox contents must be retained for this long? Do you have one that
says never forward any corporate mailbox contents to external addresses?
Things like these are formulated at the top (hopefully with IT input) and
you just enforce.


Sincerely,

D�j� Ak�m�l�f�, MCSE+M MCSA+M MCP+I
Microsoft MVP - Directory Services
www.readymaids.com - we know IT
www.akomolafe.com
Do you now realize that Today is the Tomorrow you were worried about
Yesterday?  -anon

________________________________

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] on behalf of Dan DeStefano
Sent: Tue 2/1/2005 9:23 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [ActiveDir] OT: Exchange Mail Forwarding



We have a W2k AD domain with Exchange 2000.

I am an Exchange novice.

I have a user who has recently left the company and need his e-mail
forwarded to 2 different users. The way I have done this is by setting up a
rule using the user's Outlook profile that forwards all messages to these
two users and also replies to the sender with a message that the user is no
longer with the company and who to send future e-mails to. I am not too
happy with this solution as I believe there may be a way to set this up on
the Exchange server itself. However, I have only found how to forward the
user's e-mail to another user's mailbox, but not to multiple mailboxes or to
a distribution group and no way to create the auto-reply.

My questions are:

Is it possible to set this up on the server without having to use the
client's Outlook? What about the auto-reply message?

I would like to disable the user's domain account for security reasons. If I
do, will the user's mailbox still receive messages and will the Outlook
rules still work?

What are the commonly-accepted procedures for dealing with departing users?



I would greatly appreciate any help that can be provided.





Dan DeStefano

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