From: D Smith on 5 Jan 2010 16:33 We have exchange 2003 here and use Outlook 2003 as the client. We would like to stop people from sharing their calendars with each other. A situation arose where a user shared his calendar with his secretary and he got a sensative meeting request which she shouldnt have seen. Well she saw it and it created a big problem. Is there a way to prevent users from sharing their calendars?
From: Ed Crowley [MVP] on 5 Jan 2010 17:02 Not practically. -- Ed Crowley MVP "There are seldom good technological solutions to behavioral problems." .. "D Smith" <DSmith(a)discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:24C69B26-79EC-4B4E-B3E1-48BCAB261184(a)microsoft.com... > We have exchange 2003 here and use Outlook 2003 as the client. We would > like > to stop people from sharing their calendars with each other. A situation > arose where a user shared his calendar with his secretary and he got a > sensative meeting request which she shouldnt have seen. Well she saw it > and > it created a big problem. Is there a way to prevent users from sharing > their > calendars?
From: Lanwench [MVP - Exchange] on 7 Jan 2010 00:04 On Tue, 5 Jan 2010 13:33:01 -0800, D Smith <DSmith(a)discussions.microsoft.com> wrote: >We have exchange 2003 here and use Outlook 2003 as the client. We would like >to stop people from sharing their calendars with each other. A situation >arose where a user shared his calendar with his secretary and he got a >sensative meeting request which she shouldnt have seen. Well she saw it and >it created a big problem. Is there a way to prevent users from sharing their >calendars? Even shorter answer than Ed's: No. But you can use third party stuff like Symprex Permissions Manager to check out what they've done (or PFDavAdmin, although it doesn't let you see it globally). This is a company policy issue.
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