Boundary issues.  Your clients could (and likely will) look up what it should 
do for content or site assignment and see the old entries, and want to use 
those replies...which are clearly useless.

You'll get client boundary issues all over the place.  Which will be easily 
resolved by clearing that old junk out of AD.

Remember, if the servers are still online--they'll put themselves right back in 
a few hours.  So if you accidentally delete a valid one, it'll reappear on it's 
own. 

Sherry Kissinger
 


On Monday, July 21, 2014 6:52 AM, Brian McDonald <[email protected]> 
wrote:
  


Are there any risks involved with the leaving it there?

Thanks,

Brian

Sent from my iPhone

On Jul 20, 2014, at 11:37 PM, "CE5AR.ABREG0" <[email protected]> wrote:


Yes. 
>
>
>It usually gets removed when SCCM is uninstall but in case is left, it's safe 
>to just delete it. 
>
>Cesar A.
>Meaning is NOT in words, but inside people! Dr. Myles Munroe
>My iPad takes half the blame for misspells.
>
>On Jul 20, 2014, at 9:01 PM, Brian McDonald <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
> 
>>We recently discovered our recently decommissioned SCCM 2007 site server is 
>>still publishing to AD. Is it safe to clean up the systems management 
>>container and delete the old instances?
>>
>>Thanks,
>>
>>Brian
>> 
>> 
> 


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