Forum Discussion
MTSBob
May 10, 2019Steel Contributor
Unspecified error when attempting to apply "Do Not Forward" in Outlook desktop
Office 365 E3 user. User is properly licensed and AIP is activated on tenant. Running Outlook desktop (click to run), and we get this error.
Can anyone advise?
Followed by:
Thanks,
Bob
- Esaggese
Microsoft
MTSBob Hi. That error is unfortunately quite non-specific, so it is difficult to say what's the cause.
It is most often related to authentication, and the cause is usually:
* Some old registry key which is pointing the client to the wrong tenant. Resetting the client should clear this up.
* Authentication is misconfigured, for example federation doesn't work or something of the sort.
* The required authentication type being disabled. I saw this in one case, where the client was missing the following registry key:
- Keys:
- HKLM\Software\Wow6432Node\Microsoft\MSIPC\Federation
- HKLM\Software\ Microsoft\MSIPC\Federation
- Name: EnableBrowser
- Value (DWORD): 1
Adding it solved the issue in that case.
Finally, it could be some invalid client configuration, e.g. some Office updates missing. This is important when consuming content between tenants since several issues have been fixed in the last couple of years for this scenario.
If none of these solves the problem I recommend you open a support case, and gather some client logs (with the AIP client Help and Feedback option) so they can look for the root cause of the problem.
HTH
- MTSBobSteel Contributor
Esaggese Thanks. The error I see in the AIP help/feedback dialog pop-up is, under Client Status: "Failed downloading Information Protection Policy"
Unfortunately I didn't have any success after trying the troubleshooting steps you suggested, so I did go ahead and open a support ticket.
I have gotten the usual runaround from MS Partner tech support - after spending over an hour taking screen shots, collecting logs, going through remote desktop sharing sessions, etc. with someone, she seemed to "give up" and told me she was going to email me a powershell command that I was to execute, and to send her the results. She literally sent me a one line email with a the name of a Powershell command. LOL.
Anyhow, I did that, sent her back the data returned from the command, and the next thing I know I'm reassigned to someone else, this time on the Exchange Online team, who tells me "We don't handle this, you need to open a support ticket with the Azure team." and a link, which brings me to a place where I can open a ticket for paid technical support for Azure. And of course start *all over again*, right back to the beginning.
Shoot me now.
- Esaggese
Microsoft
MTSBob I'm sorry to hear about the poor support experience, I till bring this up with the support team. Still, support is the right way to handle these issues since they do have highly skilled people that has access to the right tolls and data sources and can perform the right troubleshooting, but it is unfortunate that with a technology that touches as many components as AIP it sometimes takes a bit to reach the right specialist. We are working on improving the support flows around Information Protection, so hopefully your experience will not be repeated in the future.
In the meantime, if you can get a client log from the AIP app (via Help and Feedback) and send it over to me (reach me on Yammer) I'll have someone take a look (still, continue working with support, as I am traveling I can't guarantee a quick answer).
Regards,
Enrique
- Valon_Kolica
Microsoft