Office 365 Message Encryption – Encrypt messages to any SMTP address Personal account statement from a financial institutions Information Rights Management – Encrypt.

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Transcript Office 365 Message Encryption – Encrypt messages to any SMTP address Personal account statement from a financial institutions Information Rights Management – Encrypt.

Office 365 Message Encryption – Encrypt messages to any
SMTP address
Personal account statement from a financial institutions
Information Rights Management – Encrypt content and restrict
usage; usually within own organization
Internal company confidential memo
S/MIME – Sign and encrypt messages to users using certificates
Peer to peer signed communication within a government agency
Admin:
Simple to provision and configure
Policy driven via Transport Rules
Customizable branding of encrypted emails and mail reading portal
Allows for Enterprise content inspection and compliance
Sender:
Ability to send encrypted messages to any SMTP address regardless of recipient’s client or service
provider
Recipient:
View encrypted messages on Office 365 Message Encryption portal after sign-in
Office 365 Message Encryption portal has rich OWA controls for viewing and composing messages
Replies from the portal are also encrypted
How do recipients sign-in to view messages? – 2 ways
Microsoft account – used for sign-in to Microsoft services like OneDrive,
XBOX Live, etc…
Microsoft account for hotmail.com, outlook.com, live.com already exists
User can create Microsoft account for any SMTP address, like gmail.com, mycustomdomain.com –
address verification done as part of account creation process
If recipient does not have a Microsoft account, recipients are navigated through the process of
creating one
For a given email address, a single Microsoft account is used to access all Microsoft services and
view future encrypted emails
Organizational Account – used for sign-in to workloads like Exchange Online,
SharePoint Online, etc…
As Office 365 embraces additional identity providers, so will Office 365
Message Encryption.
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New ETR actions configurable via UI or PowerShell
New-TransportRule –Name EncryptRule <Condition for which to apply
encryption> -ApplyOME $true
New-TransportRule –Name DecryptRule <Condition for which to remove
encryption> -RemoveOME $true
Customize opening text in encrypted email and disclaimer
statement
Set-OMEConfiguration -Identity default
-EmailText "Encrypted message from
ContosoPharma secure messaging system"
Set-OMEConfiguration -Identity default
-DisclaimerText “This email message and
its attachments are for the sole use of
the …"
Set-OMEConfiguration -Identity default
-PortalText "ContosoPharma secure email portal"
Set-OMEConfiguration -Identity default
-Image (Get-Content
"C:\Users\admin\Desktop\contoso.png” Encoding byte)
Exchange Online
Policy detection and
Enforcement
O365 User
Internet User
Mail Reading Portal
Tenant
configuration
Microsoft
account/Organization
Account
Office 365 Message Encryption uses IRM as a platform to encrypt message
Sending organization needs to have purchased and configured Azure Rights Management Services (RMS)
Keys imported from Azure RMS are 2048 bit and use SHA-256 encryption (Crypto Mode 2)
Encrypted messages are wrapped in an HTML file and sent as an
attachment to intended recipients
HTML file contains the encrypted message along with other metadata
Messages can be viewed on any device that can open and post from an HTML file
When user opens and clicks on link in the attachment, encrypted content is
posted and held temporarily while user authenticates
User authenticates using a Microsoft account or Organizational Account
If user has neither, user is told and asked to create a Microsoft account before viewing
Any email address (@yahoo.com, @gmail.com, etc…) can be used to create a Microsoft account
Once the authentication completes, message is decrypted and shown in
modern UI with all rich OWA controls
Messages replied from the portal are also encrypted
Office 365 Message Encryption is included with Azure RMS
Plan
Requires
Price
Office 365 E3, E4
Windows Azure Rights Management is
included
Included
Office 365 E1, K1
Windows Azure Rights Management
$2 PUPM
Office 365 Exchange Online Plan 2, Plan 1, Kiosk
Windows Azure Rights Management
$2 PUPM
Office 365 SharePoint Plan 2, Plan 1
Windows Azure Rights Management
$2 PUPM
Office 365 Midsize Business
Windows Azure Rights Management
$2 PUPM
Exchange on-premises
Windows Azure Rights Management
$2 PUPM
* On-premise customers need to route mails through Exchange Online
** Windows Azure Rights Management is not available for Office 365 Small Business plans
Customers using EHE will be upgraded to Office 365 Message Encryption at
no additional cost
Awareness and transition emails will be sent prior to transition – Transitions
started for Q1CY14
No action required on tenant admins – existing EHE policies will be
automatically migrated to Office 365 Message Encryption policies
EHE mail recipients will continue to have access to view their old encrypted
emails
EHE account store and emails already encrypted with EHE will not be
migrated to Office 365 Message Encryption
Feature
Exchange Hosted
Encryption
Office 365 Message
Encryption
Send Encrypted Mail to anyone
Available
Available
Custom Branding
Not Available
Available
Message attachment size limit
10 MB
25 MB
Integration with Exchange transport
rules
Available, but complex headers
involved
Available and simplified
User experience
Custom EHE portal
Enhanced Office 365 UI
Integration with Data Loss Prevention
Available
Available
Purchase Option
Sold Standalone
Included with Azure RMS
Information Protection technology
Protection is persisted with the data, content can travel anywhere (desktops, file shares, USB keys,
cloud drives, network and devices)
Combines encryption and usage restrictions
Prevent accidental disclosure of sensitive data by applying usage polices (cannot forward, cannot
print, read-only)
Simple to use
Authors just select a policy option, consumers just open documents
Administrators can configure policies to protect content automatically
Securely share data with individuals within organization
Admin:
Simple to provision and configure using Windows Azure Rights Management – No on-premises
RMS server required
Policy driven via Transport Rules
Allows for Enterprise content inspection and compliance
Sender:
Ability to send IRM protected messages to recipients in the organization using supported clients OWA and Microsoft Office 2010 and 2013
Recipient:
Ability to view IRM protected content just like regular emails using supported clients (OWA,
Microsoft Office 2010 and 2013, EAS)
Automatically protect email with IRM using Exchange Transport
Rules
Protect email with IRM right from the Outlook Web App.
Admin:
Simple to provision and configure using Windows Azure Rights Management – No on-premises
RMS server required
Protection managed at individual library level protecting Office and Adobe pdf file formats
End-user:
Documents are protected at the time of download from a library and rights given to appropriate
user accounts per the library settings
User can edit the document in supported office clients and protection is removed at time of upload
Government preferred way to secure email
communication
Based on a published and broadly supported standard
Must know recipients public cert to send them encrypted mail
Must have private key associated with sending email address to sign email
Without having recipients private key, no one can open and view the message
Exchange on-prem continues to support S/MIME
OWA 2013 support added in SP1
Admin:
Admin provisions certificates to users and synchronizes them with Exchange Online
Simple Exchange Online configuration for S/MIME OWA behavior
Sender:
Ability to send signed and encrypted email to intra organization recipients who are properly
configured
Recipient
Ability to view signed and encrypted emails using OWA and supported clients and reply
Admin Exchange Online configuration options
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Office 365 Message Encryption – Encrypt messages to any SMTP
address
Personal account statement from a financial institution
Information Rights Management – Encrypt content and restrict
usage; usually within own organization or trusted partners
Internal company confidential memo
S/MIME – Sign and encrypt messages to users using certificates
Peer to peer signed communication within a government agency
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