Calendaring NDR's

G

Guest

I am not sure which category this goes in, if this is the incorrect one
please advise of the correct one.
So here is the problem that I hope you all will know the answer for.

Gent A works for Gent B.

When they were on the Domain A domain, Gent B had granted permissions to his
co-workers on his team access to his calendar at Reviewer level, Gent A was
granted Publishing Editor rights.

After migration to DOMAIN B, every time anyone sends a meeting request
response to any meeting that Gent B is invited to or has created, the person
responding gets a NDR back from Gent A, even when Gent A has nothing to do
with the meeting and is not invited to the meeting.

For example, if I were to invite us and Gent B to a meeting and You sent a
response either accepting or declining, you would receive an NDR from Gent A.

So this is what I have done to try and solve it.

Checked both accounts in AD and Exchange 5.5 for any anomalies - can't see
any.
Checked both user profiles on both domains. The only permissions set on
either were the ones above on Gent B's DOMAIN A account, I removed all those
permissions.
Created new DOMAIN B outlook profiles for both,
Ran the detect and repair on both
Ran the outlook switches /cleanfreebusy, /resetfolders, /cleanreminders.
Loaded new GALs on both profiles
Removed Gent A from Gent B's contact list,
Updated Gent A's email address by choosing it from the updated GAL in Gent
B's contact list.
Turned the setting for Smart tags off and on.
Removed Gent B's contacts as on Outlook address book.
Turned Cached mode off and on.

Nothing has seemed to help. Is there anything that I am missing?
We are running Outlook 2003 and Exchange 2003 sp1
Exchange 2003 was deployed successfully sometime before the migration to
Domain B. Neither Gent had any problem with the migration except this.
 
L

Lanwench [MVP - Exchange]

In
helpdesk genie said:
I am not sure which category this goes in, if this is the incorrect
one please advise of the correct one.
So here is the problem that I hope you all will know the answer for.

Gent A works for Gent B.

When they were on the Domain A domain, Gent B had granted permissions
to his co-workers on his team access to his calendar at Reviewer
level, Gent A was granted Publishing Editor rights.

After migration to DOMAIN B, every time anyone sends a meeting request
response to any meeting that Gent B is invited to or has created, the
person responding gets a NDR back from Gent A, even when Gent A has
nothing to do with the meeting and is not invited to the meeting.

For example, if I were to invite us and Gent B to a meeting and You
sent a response either accepting or declining, you would receive an
NDR from Gent A.

So this is what I have done to try and solve it.

Checked both accounts in AD and Exchange 5.5 for any anomalies -
can't see any.
Checked both user profiles on both domains. The only permissions set
on either were the ones above on Gent B's DOMAIN A account, I removed
all those permissions.
Created new DOMAIN B outlook profiles for both,
Ran the detect and repair on both
Ran the outlook switches /cleanfreebusy, /resetfolders,
/cleanreminders. Loaded new GALs on both profiles
Removed Gent A from Gent B's contact list,
Updated Gent A's email address by choosing it from the updated GAL in
Gent B's contact list.
Turned the setting for Smart tags off and on.
Removed Gent B's contacts as on Outlook address book.
Turned Cached mode off and on.

Nothing has seemed to help. Is there anything that I am missing?
We are running Outlook 2003 and Exchange 2003 sp1
Exchange 2003 was deployed successfully sometime before the migration
to Domain B. Neither Gent had any problem with the migration except
this.

Probably a better question for microsoft.public.exchange.admin. If you're
100% sure that Gent A is not listed as a delegate for Gent B anywhere
whatsoever, you may need to get your hands on MDBVUE (?)
 

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