Interesting Exchange Online articles from the year so far
After being out of the office for four months, there is a lot I need to catch up on! Over the past couple of weeks, I’ve been reading through articles going over what all has changed in Exchange Online and Office 365 during my time away (January to May of this year).
I have complied a list of the most interesting articles that I’ve read from the past four months and wanted to share them here. Most of these are related to Exchange Online, but there are some PowerShell ones as well.
Blogs
- Office 365 is expanding its DKIM-signing to our consumer brands plus adding default signatures to enterprise email traffic (January 2016)
- Common errors in SPF records (February 2016)
- How antispoofing protection works in Office 365 (February 2016)
- A PowerShell script to help you validate your DKIM config in Office 365 (March 2016)
- New reporting portal in the Office 365 admin center (March 2016)
- A new tool for helping resolve Office 365 issues (May 2016)
- New enhancements to Office 365 eDiscovery (May 2016)
TechNet
- Use DKIM to validate outbound email sent from your domain in Office 365 (May 2016)
- How Office 365 uses Sender Policy Framework (SPF) to prevent spoofing) (May 2016)
- Setup SPF in Office 365 to help prevent spoofing (May 2016)
- Removing a user, domain, or IP address from a block list after sending spam email (March 2016)
- Use the delist portal to remove yourself from the Office 365 blocked senders list (April 2016)
PowerShell
- PowerShell Basics: (Part 1) Getting Started with PowerShell (February 2016)
- PowerShell Basics: (Part 2) Real World Examples for Our Most Common Cmdlets (February 2016)
- PowerShell Basics: (Part 3) Real World Script Examples (March 2016)
- PowerShell for Office 365 (This is from last year, but a very good resource)
Cheers!
Andrew
Comments
- Anonymous
May 28, 2016
Thanks - Anonymous
June 21, 2016
Another invaluable addition:https://blogs.technet.microsoft.com/office365security/how-to-review-and-mitigate-the-impact-of-phishing-attacks-in-office-365/