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Microsoft Office 2008 for Mac Administrator’s Guide

Introducing Office 2008 for Mac

  Office 2008 Evaluation
How Office 2008 delivers business value
  What's new in Office 2008
What's new for the IT professional
What's new for the end user
Compare versions of Office for Mac
Office 2008 system requirements
Online training for information workers
About Microsoft Volume Licensing programs
  Office 2008 Planning
  Planning a deployment
Office 2008 system requirements
Deployment methods for Office 2008
Deployment methods for Office 2008 preferences
Setup sequence of events
Planning for Office 2008 product updates
Planning your e-mail system
  Planning for Entourage 2008
Default ports for Entourage 2008
Exchange Server and related requirements for Entourage 2008
Entourage 2008 deployments in an Active Directory infrastructure
How the Account Setup Assistant works
How e-mail rules work in Entourage 2008
How information is synchronized between Entourage 2008 and Exchange Server
How Entourage 2008 works with free/busy data
Entourage 2008 features supported by different versions of Exchange Server
Differences between Entourage 2008 and Outlook 2007
  Planning Entourage security
Authentication and security in the WebDAV environment
Configure external program access to Entourage 2008
Customize Entourage 2008 attachment settings
Digital certificate requirements for sending and receiving messages
Enable password encryption for POP and IMAP accounts
Enable SMTP authentication
Enable Secure Sockets Layer
How users manage digital certificates in Entourage 2008
Plan for limiting junk e-mail
Relocating multiple identities in Entourage to separate user accounts
Smart card support
Using Entourage 2008 with ISA Server and ADAM
Using Entourage 2008 with Kerberos authentication
  Planning to use Office 2008 with related Microsoft products
Working with SharePoint sites and Office Live Workspace by using Document Connection for Mac
Working with external data sources in Excel
Working with macros
  Office 2008 Deployment
  Deploying Office 2008 applications
Creating the installation image
Installation by using Apple Remote Desktop
Installing Office 2008 from a NetBoot image
Installation from a file server
Installing Office 2008 for Mac updates in a corporate environment
  Configuring and deploying Office 2008 preferences
  Configuring Office 2008 application preferences
Configuring Word 2008 preferences
Configuring Excel 2008 preferences
Configuring PowerPoint 2008 preferences
Configuring Entourage 2008 preferences
Configuring AutoUpdate for Office 2008
Adding custom templates, themes, scripts, and ancillary files
Office 2008 preference file locations for deployment
Deploying Office 2008 preferences
  Configuring Office 2008 applications
Configuring Exchange accounts in Entourage 2008
Configuring Office 2008 for multiple languages
  Office 2008 Operations
  Maintaining Entourage 2008
Verifying database integrity
Rebuilding the Entourage database
Compacting and backing up the Entourage database
Managing Mac OS X system preferences
Distributing Office 2008 product updates
  Office 2008 Security
  Planning for security in Office 2008
Understanding security threats
Best practices for a security-enhanced environment
  Configuring and deploying security settings for Office 2008
Configure privacy options in Office 2008
Configure document protection settings in Office 2008
Configure security settings for macros in Excel 2008
Deploy Office 2008 security preferences
  Mac OS X security
Mac OS X passwords
Mac OS X firewall
  Office 2008 Technical Reference
  Messaging reference
About Project Center
About phishing detection in Entourage 2008
About public folders
About delegation and sharing
About data synchronization
About Open XML Formats
Attachment file types in Entourage 2008
Play voice mail messages received from Exchange Server 2007 Unified Messaging
  Office 2008 Known Issues
Security issue in Office 2008 remote installation to Mac OS X v10.4 (Tiger)
I can't download the volume license version of Office 2008 for Mac by using Safari
Restricted users might have unauthorized access to Office 2008 for Mac program files
Known issues for installation and removal of Office 2008
Office Setup Assistant quits unexpectedly during installation of Office 2008 for Mac to network home folders
When I deploy Office 2008 for Mac SP1, the update is not installed on client computers
  Office 2008 Troublehshooting
Troubleshooting Entourage

Messenger Deployment Guide

  Erste Schritte
Überblick
Neuigkeiten für Corporate-Konten in Messenger für Mac 7
Systemanforderungen für Messenger für Mac 7
Aktualisieren und Interoperabilität
Vergleich zwischen Messenger für Mac 7 und Office Communicator 2007
  Architektur und Planung
Topologie von Messenger für Mac 7
Best Practices für die Sicherheit
  Installieren und Konfigurieren von Messenger 7 in einem Unternehmensnetzwerk
Installieren von Messenger für Mac 7
Herstellen einer Verbindung mit Office Communications Server
Deinstallieren von Messenger für Mac 7
  Nach der Installation
Festlegen von Einstellungen für Audio und Video
Bereitstellen von Einstellungen für Messenger für Mac 7
Verwenden von Messenger für Mac 7 mit Office 2008 für Mac
  Technische Referenz
Einstellungen von Messenger für Mac 7

Office 2008 for Mac VPATs

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Understanding security threats

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To establish a secure computing environment, you must make sure that your applications and data are not vulnerable to malicious attacks. By using the security options in Office 2008, you can establish a security-enhanced environment by limiting the possible avenues of attack.

This guide presents many different methods to mitigate security threats that will help you limit direct attacks on data from external and internal sources. An important part of implementing these methods is training users about how to protect themselves and the company from attack. This training usually builds user awareness of security issues, and establishes ownership of the data that users want to protect. For example, you can educate your users to distinguish between low-risk files and high-risk files. Low risk files can be internal documents that may not contain malicious content, such as documents from colleagues or business partners. High-risk documents are documents from unknown people or documents that pass through an unsecured Internet connection. It is important that users evaluate risks and mitigate potential security threats. Users shouldn't treat both types of files the same way.

Caution

There are no administrative settings that allow you to enforce security preferences that you specify. Even if you set and deploy security preferences, users can change these preferences at a later time. Therefore, if you are deploying security settings as part of your organization's policy, you must educate your users about the risks associated with changing default settings. Without proper training, users can expose an organization to unauthorized or malicious use of its data. Establishing a corporate policy for how files are distributed and handled helps mitigate security vulnerabilities caused by untrained users.

Before you plan and implement a security-enhanced environment, it is important to understand the different types of security threats. The following sections of this topic list potential security threats in today’s computing environment. The rest of the Security chapter addresses how to plan for a secure computing environment and how you can configure the security options in Office 2008 to help address security concerns.

Privacy threats

Many documents contain metadata that should be protected, including text marked as "hidden", author name, and changes tracked by Office 2008 revision tracking tools. This metadata is useful because it enables users track document property data. However, in some cases users might not want to expose the metadata when the document is distributed. By exposing the metadata, users become vulnerable to privacy threats. Privacy threats include any threat agent that discloses or reveals personal or private information without the user’s consent or knowledge. Word 2008, Excel 2008, and PowerPoint 2008 allow users to strip out sensitive metadata when the file is saved. With Entourage 2008, you can use Internet-standard S/MIME security extensions; S/MIME allows users to digitally sign and encrypt e-mail messages and attachments to help protect them against tampering or eavesdropping.

For more information about planning and configuring security options that mitigate privacy threats, see the following topics:

  • Configure privacy options in Office 2008 in the Office 2008 Security section

  • How users manage digital certificates in Entourage 2008 in the Office 2008 Planning section

Document threats

If your organization allows users to send and receive documents over the Internet, or if you believe there are potential risks to users' documents from any unauthorized source, you should take the necessary precautions against document threats. When intruders or attackers gain access to proprietary information, it might result in the loss of confidentiality or document data. Users can mitigate document threats if they use the password protection feature to encrypt documents in Excel 2008 and Word 2008.

Note There are no administrative settings that enable you to force users to encrypt documents.

For more information about configuring document protection settings that mitigate document threats, see Configure document protection settings in Office 2008 in the Office 2008 Security section.

Code threats

If you connect to the Internet or allow others to use your computer, it is important that you take the necessary steps to protect your system from harm, including attacks from malicious software. Code and application threats pose a potential risk if your organization allows users to:

  • Run macros or add-ins.

  • Receive e-mail attachments.

  • Share documents across a public network, such as the Internet.

  • Open documents from sources outside your organization, such as clients, vendors, or partners.

Excel 2008, Word 2008, and Entourage 2008 allow the use of strong encryption to help protect the contents of documents so that they're unreadable by unauthorized people.

For information about configuring security settings for macros, see Configure security settings for macros in Excel 2008 in the Office 2008 Security section.

External threats

External threats can include threat agents such as hyperlinks, embedded objects in e-mails, and data connections that link a document to another document, database, or Web site across an intranet or public network.

External threats are a risk if your organization:

  • Provides users with unrestricted access to public networks, such as the Internet.

  • Allows users to receive e-mail messages that contain embedded images and HTML.

  • Allows users to use data connections in spreadsheets or other documents.

For information about planning and configuring security settings that mitigate threats from external agents, see Configure external program access to Entourage 2008 in the Office 2008 Planning section.

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