Forum Discussion
Should I expect AWS to respect Azure Information Protection (AIP) protected e-mails?
TonyRedmondand msExchangeDude thanks for replies. AWS=Amazon Workspace which is a Windows 10 desktop that lives in the Amazon cloud, domain connected and for all intents and purposes, the same setup as my laptop but virtual.
TonyRedmondTeams has some awareness I feel when Do Not Forward is selected for an Outlook mail. i.e. When I try and share my screen with a message protected by Office Message Encryption in MS Teams from my Windows 10 physical laptop, the remote users see a black screen. When I perform that same exact action from my AWS Windows 10 virtual desktop, Teams displays the e-mail during the screen sharing session.
We are aware that where there is a will there is a way, and bad actors can exfiltrate our data in other ways than forwarding a message or screen sharing.
I was curious to know if others can reproduce this and help me to understand where I should be taking this concern. i.e. is MS responsible to ensure that their O/S (whether on a VM or physical machine) operates consistently or is the responsibility with Amazon in some way?
per your description of the issue, i would point to the display driver in use on the virtual machine and how the desktop is rendered as this may be a dependency for teams' ability to black out certain windows.