What should you configure for each requirement?

DRAG DROP
You have an Exchange Server 2013 organization named Contoso. The organization is configured to
apply a disclaimer to all email messages sent to external recipients. Your company works with a
partner company named A. Datum Corporation. A. Datum has an SMTP domain named adatum.com.
You need to ensure that email messages sent to adatum.com meet the following compliance
requirements:

• Messages sent to adatum.com must NOT include the disclaimer.
• Messages that contain credit card numbers must NOT be sent to adatum.com.
• If a user writes a message that contains a credit card number and the message is addressed
to a recipient at adatum.com, the user must receive a notification before the message is sent.
What should you configure for each requirement?
To answer, drag the appropriate configuration to the correct requirement in the answer area. Each
configuration may be used once, more than once, or not at all. Additionally, you may need to drag
the split bar between panes or scroll to view content.

DRAG DROP
You have an Exchange Server 2013 organization named Contoso. The organization is configured to
apply a disclaimer to all email messages sent to external recipients. Your company works with a
partner company named A. Datum Corporation. A. Datum has an SMTP domain named adatum.com.
You need to ensure that email messages sent to adatum.com meet the following compliance
requirements:

• Messages sent to adatum.com must NOT include the disclaimer.
• Messages that contain credit card numbers must NOT be sent to adatum.com.
• If a user writes a message that contains a credit card number and the message is addressed
to a recipient at adatum.com, the user must receive a notification before the message is sent.
What should you configure for each requirement?
To answer, drag the appropriate configuration to the correct requirement in the answer area. Each
configuration may be used once, more than once, or not at all. Additionally, you may need to drag
the split bar between panes or scroll to view content.

Answer:

Explanation:

Box 1: A transport rule exception
Box 2: A data loss prevention policy
Box 3: a Policy Tip
Note:
* Each transport rule can have exceptions that specify what to exclude from the condition.
Exceptions typically determine a subset of criteria identified in the condition. If you use transport
rules, you can specify what information you don’t want to enter or leave the organization, which
individuals or groups shouldn’t be able to communicate with one another, how messages are
handled based on how they are classified by the sender, and more.
* The Data loss prevention (DLP) feature in the new Exchange will help you identify, monitor, and
protect sensitive information in your organization through deep content analysis. DLP is increasingly
important for enterprise message systems because business critical email includes sensitive data

that needs to be protected. It’s the financial information, personally identifiable information (PII)
and intellectual property data that can be accidently sent to unauthorized users that keeps the CSO
up all night.
* Policy Tip notification messages are displayed to users in Outlook while they are composing an
email message. Policy Tip notification messages only show up if something about the sender’s email
message seems to violate a DLP policy that you have in place and that policy includes a rule to notify
the sender when the conditions that you establish are met.
* Incorrect: MailTips are evaluated every time a sender adds a recipient to a message.
Reference: Introducing Data Loss Prevention in the New Exchange; Policy Tips



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