J
Jane Frasier
I support the staff at a public library. The staff at the service desks log
onto the computers using a generic logon. Logged in as that user I check the
Mail profile to prompt for a profile. When a user first opens Outlook they
create a new Profile for themselves and check to require a username and
password. That all seemed hunky dory. However we have discovered that a user
can select someone else's profile but use their own logon and password and
still get the first users mailbox and can do anything they want with it. What
is the point of different profiles and logons if a person can gain access to
someone else's mailbox?
What is the solution besides making them log onto the machine as themselves
or use OWA.
Thanks.
onto the computers using a generic logon. Logged in as that user I check the
Mail profile to prompt for a profile. When a user first opens Outlook they
create a new Profile for themselves and check to require a username and
password. That all seemed hunky dory. However we have discovered that a user
can select someone else's profile but use their own logon and password and
still get the first users mailbox and can do anything they want with it. What
is the point of different profiles and logons if a person can gain access to
someone else's mailbox?
What is the solution besides making them log onto the machine as themselves
or use OWA.
Thanks.