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Encrypting Outlook for Offline Use
Hello all,
I'm a Network/Desktop admin at a small company, and my boss has recently expressed his concern with protecting his email. He has a laptop and has a lot of passwords and other things in his Outlook folders(inbox, etc) and is worried about if his laptop got stolen, and someone got into his windows account, they would be able to read his messages. I set him up with a system key along with his regular windows logon, but he's still concerned. While he is here at work he can use the password authentication, but I believe that only works while he is on the network. Any suggestions on how I would go about making sure his e-mail messages are secure when he's outside the office? Also, since Outlook downloads all the messages, I'm curious as to where they physically go on the hard drive, so I could make sure to encrypt this folder(s). Thanks! |
Encrypting Outlook for Offline Use
Shefsta wrote:
I'm a Network/Desktop admin at a small company, and my boss has recently expressed his concern with protecting his email. He has a laptop and has a lot of passwords and other things in his Outlook folders(inbox, etc) and is worried about if his laptop got stolen, and someone got into his windows account, they would be able to read his messages. Put a BIOS password on the machine. He better realize, though, that he better not forget it. If he forgets it, his PC is a paperweight or doorstop unless the manufacturer can unlock it. I set him up with a system key along with his regular windows logon, but he's still concerned. While he is here at work he can use the password authentication, but I believe that only works while he is on the network. Any suggestions on how I would go about making sure his e-mail messages are secure when he's outside the office? Also, since Outlook downloads all the messages, I'm curious as to where they physically go on the hard drive, so I could make sure to encrypt this folder(s). He can password-protect his PST. Have him right-click Outlook Today (i.e., the root of his folder tree), select Properties, click Advanced and set a password there. He better realize, though, that he's better not forget the password because it may be unrecoverable. -- Brian Tillman |
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