Solution: You run the following command from an adminis…

An organization uses an Active Directory Rights Management Services (AD RMS) cluster names RMS1 to protect content for a project. You uninstall AD RMS when
the project is complete.
You need to ensure that the protected content is still available after AD RMS is uninstalled.
Solution: You run the following command from an administrative command prompt:

cipher /a/d/s:<protected share name>
Does this meet the goal?

An organization uses an Active Directory Rights Management Services (AD RMS) cluster names RMS1 to protect content for a project. You uninstall AD RMS when
the project is complete.
You need to ensure that the protected content is still available after AD RMS is uninstalled.
Solution: You run the following command from an administrative command prompt:

cipher /a/d/s:<protected share name>
Does this meet the goal?

A.
Yes

B.
No

Explanation:
If you plan to remove Active Directory Rights Management Services from your organization, you should first
decommission the AD RMS cluster. This allows your AD RMS users to remove AD RMS protection from existing content.
If you uninstall AD RMS without first decommissioning it, your protected content will no longer be accessible.
Decommissioning AD RMS
http://blogs.technet.com/b/rms/archive/2012/04/29/decommissioning-ad-rms.aspx



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LTV SintIsidorushoeve

LTV SintIsidorushoeve

B. No

Cipher.exe is a command-line tool that you can use to manage data (Encrypting File System / EFS) which was encrypted using EFS. Files that have been protected by using the Active Directory Rights Management Services (AD RMS) can not be managed with Cipher.exe