You have an Exchange Server 2013 organization.
You create two distribution groups named Group1 and Group2. Group1 and Group2 each contain several
hundred users. Group1 contains a user named User1.
You need to configure moderation for Group2. The solution must meet the following requirements:
Email sent from the members of Group1 must NOT be moderated unless the sender is User1.
All other email must be moderated by a user named Admin1.
Which two actions should you perform? (Each correct answer presents part of the solution. Choose two.)
A.
Create a transport rule that has a condition of The recipient is Group2. Configure the transport rule to have
an action of Forward the message for approval to Admin1.
B.
Run Set-DistributionGroup Group2 -ModeratedBy Admin1 -BypassModerationFromSendersOrMembers
Group1 -ModerationEnabled $true.
C.
Create a transport rule that has the conditions of The sender is User1 and The recipient is Group2.
Configure the transport rule to have an action of Forward the message for approval to Admin1.
D.
Create a transport rule that has the conditions of The sender is User1 and The recipient is Group2.
Configure the transport rule to have an action of Forward the message for approval to Admin1.
Explanation:
Moderated Transport
You can require all messages sent to specific recipients be approved by moderators by Using the moderated
transport feature in Microsoft Exchange Server 2013.
You can configure any type of recipient as a moderated recipient, and Exchange will ensure that all messages
sent to those recipients go through an approval process.
In any type of organization, you may need to restrict access to specific recipients. The most common scenario
is the need to control messages sent to large distribution groups.
Depending on your organization’s requirements, you may also need to control the messages sent to executive
mailboxes or partner contacts. You can use moderated recipients to accomplish these tasks.
Transport Rules
Using Transport rules, you can look for specific conditions in messages that pass through your organization and
take action on them.
Transport rules let you apply messaging policies to email messages, secure messages, protect messaging
systems, and prevent information leakage.
Many organizations today are required by law, regulatory requirements, or company policies to apply
messaging policies that limit the interaction between recipients and senders, both inside and outside the
organization. In addition to limiting interactions among individuals, departmental groups inside the organization,
and entities outside the organization, some organizations are also subject to the following messaging policy
requirements:
Preventing inappropriate content from entering or leaving the organization
Filtering confidential organization information
Tracking or archiving copying messages that are sent to or received from specific individuals
Redirecting inbound and outbound messages for inspection before delivery
Applying disclaimers to messages as they pass through the organization
As messages go through the Transport pipeline, the Transport rules agent is invoked. The Transport rules
agent is a special Transport agent that processes the Transport rules you create.
The Transport rules agent scans the message, and if the message fits the conditions you specify in a Transport
rule, it takes the specified action on that message.
NOT A
This means that all email sent to Group2 will be moderated.
NOT D
Unknown option
B
When you configure a recipient for moderation, all messages sent to that recipient are subject to approval by
the designated moderators.
Allow the members of the distribution group named Group1 to bypass moderation.
Combination of this rule and option C allows for only User1 to be affected by the moderator Admin1
C
Need to create a transport rule that identifies User1.
Moderated Transport: Exchange 2013 Help