App Protection Policy
3 TopicsEnsure Work Profile used for Outlook app
I was piloting an Android app protection policy to ensure that when a user attempted to sign into Outlook on their Personal tray, it prompted them to install Company Portal, and would not allow their corporate mail to be accessed on the "personal" Outlook app. When I now go to edit the policy, I do not see where this was configured. I believe it was under 'App-level settings' or something to that effect, but that is no longer present. Has this functionality been removed? Is there another way to do this? Any help with this would be great, as i was going to use this to round up a lot of unmanaged phones in our environment.Solved2.3KViews0likes2CommentsApp protection policy not applying
Hi, I'm trying to configure an iOS app protection policy for a client but I'm failing to get it applied on a iPhone XR with a fully licensed user. I deployed the app config policy with the IntuneMAMUPN key, currently only testing with the Outlook app, which is set as required in the portal. I reseted my phone, even created an Itunes account with my company test mail address, after configuring my phoen for the first time I installed the Intune portal App a go through the device registration process. My phone gets an compliant status, marked as personally, even if changed to company owned no change until now, Outlook config policy is applied but not the protection policy. When I check the monitor view I get the warning "This user is blocked by user-level wipe." and I can't find article about this error^^ Can anyone give me a hint to solve this nasty issue? Thanks.Solved6.4KViews1like5CommentsMulti-Identity Support in iOS Apps (Word, Excel, OneDrive, Outlook)
I've been experimenting with App Protection Policies I need someone to clarify something for me. Apps can be written in a way that supports multi-identity so as to not interfere with users using apps for personal reasons. This works great in Outlook and OneDrive where they make it very easy to switch between corporate and personal accounts. In Word and Excel (and I assume PowerPoint), it seems that the user is required to log out of corporate identity entirely when using the app because you can't have multiple identities logged in at one time. This means that if a user opens a .docx attachment from Gmail and opens it in Word, it automatically gets sucked into the corporate environment with no way out other than not saving it. Similarly, they can't start a personal Word document without logging out of the corporate identity. Is there really no way to easily switch between two logged-in identities similar to the way Outlook and OneDrive let you do it? If not, what exactly is multi-identity about the iOS Office apps?Solved1.9KViews0likes1Comment