Microsoft Exchange Server 2007 will determine that a message is sent by the Microsoft
Exchange Recipient by comparing the sender ??™ s email address to the list of email addresses specified
in the MicrosoftExchangeRecipientEmailAddresses of the Get-OrganizationalConfig
cmdlet. To overcome this hurdle, the Microsoft Exchange Recipient of each forest can be configured
with an additional email address that matches the primary email address of the Microsoft
Exchange Recipient in the other forest. Hence, when a comparison is made of the
MicrosoftExchangeRecipientEmailAddresses parameter, a match would be detected thus
allowing the system - generated message to bypass message restrictions. This configuration, however,
has a drawback if the Microsoft Exchange Recipient in either or both forests is configured with a
reply address defined by the MicrosoftExchangeRecipientReplyRecipient parameter . By default
this parameter is set to $null .
Figure 4-16
Part I: PowerShell for Exchange Fundamentals
102
Exchange Server 2007 Group Objects
As in previous versions of Exchange Server, Distribution Groups are used to enable bulk distribution of
email to multiple Recipients both within and outside of an Exchange organization. In Windows Server
2003 and earlier, Active Directory Services Groups could be either Distribution Groups used only for
email distribution or Security Groups used for granting permission to resources in the forest.
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