Credentials belong to someone, but that does not mean that the owner was the
user.  Sloppy password protection can create an opportunity for someone else
to masquerade as you, which is especially useful for nefarious activities.
Reading someone else's mail is definitely nefarious - right up there with
"less than useful" disclaimers.  All that the logs will tell you is whether
or not a key was used to open a door.  They cannot tell you who was using
the key.  Let's not confuse bytes with people.

Delegate access and calendar viewing come to mind.

Disclaimer changed below.

-----Original Message-----
From: Taylor, Mal [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Tuesday, June 25, 2002 8:13 AM
To: Exchange Discussions
Subject: Mailbox Privacy



One of our users (userA) accuses userB of attempting to read his email.
The evidence is:-
1       Within Exchange admin, in the mailbox resources window, the Windows
NT account is displaying userB.
2       An event log id 1016 occurred stating userB logged onto userA
mailbox and is not the primary user.

UserB categorically denies attempting to access the mailbox.
 
Any reasons as to how this could happen assuming userB is telling the truth

Exchange 5.5 SP4 Windows 2000 SP2


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delete less than useful disclaimers
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