You need to disguise file names and document titles, while still collecting the telemetry data

You are the Office 365 administrator for your company. The company has a single Active
Directory Domain Services domain. As part of the Office 365 deployment, the company is
preparing to deploy Office Telemetry.
You need to disguise file names and document titles, while still collecting the telemetry data.
What should you do?

You are the Office 365 administrator for your company. The company has a single Active
Directory Domain Services domain. As part of the Office 365 deployment, the company is
preparing to deploy Office Telemetry.
You need to disguise file names and document titles, while still collecting the telemetry data.
What should you do?

A.
In the Telemetry Dashboard, display only files that are used by multiple users.

B.
On each client computer, edit the registry to prevent telemetry logging.

C.
In the Telemetry Dashboard, obfuscate the document name, title, and path.

D.
In the Telemetry Dashboard, apply a label named Private to employees.



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gpf

gpf

So as per link above:

Disguise or obscure user and file data that is shown in Telemetry Dashboard

It’s common for users in an organization to save Office files by using file names that contain sensitive or confidential information. Although these files might have high business value that justifies monitoring them for compatibility issues, business groups such as legal and human resources might object to having their computers monitored to avoid revealing confidential file names to administrators who use Telemetry Dashboard.
To allow yourself and other administrators to identify the owners of Office files that have compatibility issues without revealing file names or specific locations, you can enable file obfuscation, which disguises Office file names, titles, and file paths. This setting is configured on the Telemetry Agent, which performs the obfuscation task before uploading data to the shared folder. The data that is stored on the local computer is not obfuscated.

Answer is C

Adrian

Adrian

But you can enable it by GPO or registry in each client computer so I will say B.

Serrano

Serrano

Are you trolling? B will prevent telemetry logging altogether.

Andres Martinez

Andres Martinez

C is the correct answer, but the correct way to obfuscate file names is via the registry or group policy.

Josh

Josh

Answer is C – as you need to obfuscate the document name, title, and path in order to disguise file names and document titles.

Marty McFly

Marty McFly

The answer is ******

JCD

JCD

The answer is B for sure. “On each client computer, edit the registry to prevent telemetry logging.”
Also there are others methods like GPO.

“The following example enables file obfuscation in the registry of a client computer. Save this code sample as a .reg file and then run it on the monitored client computers.

Windows Registry Editor Version 5.00

[HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Policies\Microsoft\Office\15.0\osm]
“EnableFileObfuscation”=dword:00000001


and
“To allow yourself and other administrators to identify the owners of Office files that have compatibility issues without revealing file names or specific locations, you can enable file obfuscation, which disguises Office file names, titles, and file paths. This setting is configured on the Telemetry Agent, which performs the obfuscation task before uploading data to the shared folder. The data that is stored on the local computer is not obfuscated.”
From https://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/jj591589.aspx#Configure

Google

Google

Just beneath, are various completely not associated web sites to ours, however, they are surely worth going over.