In addition, the S/MIME settings page provides a link so you can reinstall S/MIME control directly through OWA. You can choose to encrypt all the messages you send or digitally sign all messages with S/MIME. In OWA, to change your S/MIME settings, click the down arrow next to your name and select S/MIME settings.
Users are also able to select and make changes to their S/MIME settings in OWA. When you receive a digitally signed and encrypted S/MIME email, the digital signature is displayed on the message. When a digitally signed S/MIME mail is sent, the receiver sees the valid digital signature on the received message. You can select the S/MIME options to encrypt or digitally sign the message when you send a message in OWA. In OWA, users can choose different options to encrypt the message and/or digitally sign it using S/MIME. Send and receive digitally signed email via Outlook, OWA, and EAS clients.Compose, send, receive, encrypt, and decrypt S/MIME-encrypted email via Outlook, OWA, and Exchange Active Sync (EAS) clients that support S/MIME.This means that online and on-premises users will be able to: You can learn more about S/MIME in this technet article.Īfter S/MIME is enabled, customers who have a hybrid setup of Exchange Online and on-premises Exchange Server 2013 can have their online and on-premises users send S/MIME emails to one another. It also helps enhance privacy and data security (using encryption) for electronic messaging. S/MIME allows a user to: (1) encrypt an email and (2) digitally sign an email, and thus provides cryptographic security services such as authentication, message integrity, and non-repudiation of origin (using digital signatures). S/MIME (Secure/Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions) is a standard for public key encryption and digital signing of MIME data, and it is defined in a number of Requests for Comments (RFCs): 3369, 3370, 3850, and 3851. S/MIME for Outlook and EAS is already available on Exchange Online and S/MIME on OWA is being rolled out and is expected to be completed by early April. With this release, customers will have S/MIME support across Outlook, Outlook Web App (OWA), and Exchange ActiveSync clients. As part of our ongoing focus on encryption, we announced yesterday that we’re bringing S/MIME capability to Office 365 and Exchange Server 2013 Service Pack 1. Earlier this month, we announced Office 365 Message Encryption, a new service that allows you to send encrypted mail to anyone. A key aspect of our strategy is to expand encryption across all our services. Recently, we published a blog post that outlines how strongly committed we are to protecting our customers’ information.