You can implement EFS on systems running Windows 2000 and Windows XP 
Professional Edition. Windows 95/98, Windows Millennium Edition, and Windows XP 
Home Edition do not support EFS. 

Before implementing EFS to protect your corporate data, you need to create a 
recovery key. Make sure you keep a backup copy of the Encrypted Recovery Agent 
(ERA); this is your insurance policy to decrypt files throughout your domain. 

Stand-alone workstations generate their own public key certificate that you can 
use for EFS. However, in a domain environment, you'll need to create an ERA 
before enabling EFS. After creating the ERA, back it up to a media format that 
you can protect under lock and key. 

To create an ERA, follow these steps: 


Go to Start | Programs | Administrative Tools | Active Directory Users And 
Computers. (If you have a stand-alone system, go to Start | Control Panel | 
Administrative Tools | Local Security Policy, and skip to Step 4.) 
Right-click your domain, and select Properties. 
On the Group Policy tab, select the Default Domain Policy, and click the Edit 
button. 
Go to Computer Settings | Security Settings | Public Key Policies | Encrypted 
Data Recovery Agents. 
Right-click the policy, and select New | Encrypted Recovery Agent. 
Use the wizard to add the recovery agent certificates to the policy. 
After creating the certificate, right-click the certificate, select Export, and 
use the Certificate Export Wizard to export your certificate to some other 
physically securable media (e.g., CD, floppy, etc.). 

After the policy refreshes, all users on your domain will be able to safely 
encrypt the contents of their files or folders. 

Encrypting a file or folder is relatively easy. Follow these steps: 


In Windows Explorer, right-click the file or folder you want to encrypt, and 
select Properties. 
In the Encrypted Files Properties dialog box, click Advanced on the General 
tab. 
Select the Encrypt Contents To Secure Data check box, and click OK twice. 

Make sure you have a copy of your users' certificates to use for emergency 
decryption in the event of workstation rebuilds. 

Keep in mind that you can't encrypt compressed files or folders. Marking a file 
or folder for encryption will automatically uncompress the file or folder. In 
addition, copying or moving a file to a non-NTFS volume will automatically 
decrypt it. 

Final thoughts 

It's a good idea to implement EFS in phases after your users have a certificate 
and you have a good backup copy of that certificate locked in a drawer. 

You can expect your biggest boost in security to come when you implement EFS 
for laptop users. If a user loses a laptop, but he or she encrypted data with 
the domain account, that data will remain secure.

-----Original Message-----
From: Larry [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: 26 April 2006 03:28 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: EFS rollout using Active Directory

Greetings:
 
Does anyone have a procedure for implementing Microsoft EFS using Active
Directory ?
 
I have to roll EFS out to 2000+ laptops and would like to implement using
Active Directory, but I don't have a lot of experience with AD.
 
Thanks
 
/LC



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