Introduction to Domain and Forest Trusts

By using Windows Server 2003 domain and forest trusts, service administrators can create or extend collaborative relationships between two or more domains or forests. Windows Server 2003 domains and forests can also trust Kerberos realms and other Windows Server 2003 forests, as well as Microsoft Windows® 2000 domains and Windows NT® 4.0 domains.

When a trust exists between two domains, the authentication mechanisms for each domain trust the authentications coming from the other domain. Trusts help to provide controlled access to shared resources in a resource domain (the trusting domain) by verifying that incoming authentication requests come from a trusted authority (the trusted domain). In this way, trusts act as bridges that allow only validated authentication requests to travel between domains.

How a specific trust passes authentication requests depends on how it is configured. Trust relationships can be one-way, providing access from the trusted domain to resources in the trusting domain, or two-way, providing access from each domain to resources in the other domain. Trusts are also either nontransitive, in which case a trust exists only between the two trust partner domains, or transitive, in which case a trust automatically extends to any other domains that either of the partners trusts.

In some cases, trust relationships are established automatically when domains are created; in other cases, administrators must choose a type of trust and explicitly establish the appropriate relationships. The specific types of trusts that are used and the structure of the resulting trust relationships in a given trust implementation depend on such factors as how Active Directory is organized and whether different versions of Windows coexist on the network.

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After the configuration of IMF

Make sure you monitor your Junk Mail folder. Test your e-mail software (it does not necessarily have to be Outlook) and make sure you don't have too many false positives. If you do, or if you see that legitimate e-mail is deleted or treated as junk you can always go back to the IMF configuration screen and lower your SCL rating.

Important issues and limitations of IMF

Here is a listing of important issues and limitations of IMF, things that you should consider before deploying IMF:

  • The Intelligent Message Filter can only be installed on Exchange 2003.

  • IMF is a heuristic text search engine, based upon simple text search. Skilled spammers have already found many tricks around this simple filtering method, thus making IMF obsolete even before it came out on the market.

  • Updating IMF is a task that needs to be done regularly, yet currently, there is no apparent way to do it. Even if IMF works well for you in the beginning, it may not work as well a few months later, when major spammers find their way around it.

  • IMF does not offer any granularity necessary for treating groups of users differently at the server level. Settings on the server side are the same for everybody.

  • Although generally a good idea, IMF may in fact cause greater administrative effort than before. E-mail with higher SCL threshold will be either thrown away or archived before the client ever sees it, meaning that the administrator will have to search the central archive for false positives, rather than just leaving that task to the users.

  • The features of IMF are fully available only for users of Outlook 2003 or Outlook Web Access, and although limited functionality is available with other versions of Outlook, companies that use other third party solutions will probably be disappointed by it's lack of features.

  • No performance figures are yet to be published by Microsoft. We still need to see how IMF affects your server performance.

 


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