Gary McCune
My feedback
-
1,510 votes
“Secret groups” is still on the Microsoft 365 Groups backlog, but there is no delivery date available at this time.
An error occurred while saving the comment -
1,823 votes
Thank you for your responses. We appreciate that you’ve taken the time to provide us with feedback to help make our products better.
We’re actively working on significant improvements to the end user experience with the feature across Outlook clients. This includes improvements to the UX, the classification algorithms, and controls.
Today, admins have a Power-Shell cmdlet that allows them to control the Clutter feature on a per mailbox level. Details of this can be found here: https://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/mt586787%28v=exchg.160%29.aspx?f=255&MSPPError=-2147217396
Our decision to provide the cmdlet based control for Clutter was based on early feedback we received on the Clutter feature.
We will continue to improve the admin controls based on the continued feedback. Considering the responses on this forum, it would be helpful to better understand the gaps in the current admin control story. Do you believe the gap here is in not having a tenant level control or not having…
An error occurred while saving the comment Gary McCune commented
NOT WHAT WE WERE ASKING FOR
We've always been able to manage clutter on individual accounts via cmdlets.We need to TURN IT COMPLETELY OFF AT THE TENANT LEVEL. Make a powershell for that, we don't need a GUI.
I have run it on our entire userbase, but it's crazy to ask that we do this on every new account created. Just let us turn Clutter off for our organization.
Clutter is a really, really poor product. Our IT team has tried to get it to work effectively by moving things from clutter to our Inboxes on a daily basis. And yet, Clutter never seems to catch on. How is it smart in any way?
And the user can't customize it at all! There's no white-listing or clutter-flagging we can do; or at least there wasn't back in Sept when we turned it off.
Clutter was rolled out without any controls from an admin or user perspective and works horribly out of the box.Gary McCune supported this idea ·
-
14,243 votes
The functionality to make it possible to change the name of an O365 tenant, especially with Sharepoint Online in mind, is being planned. There is no ETA at this time though.
Gary McCune supported this idea ·
-
4 votes
Gary McCune supported this idea ·
-
18 votes
Gary McCune supported this idea ·
-
4 votes
Gary McCune supported this idea ·
An error occurred while saving the comment Gary McCune commented
I cannot read this, but it comes across in English as "Clutter' and a bunch of swearing.
This seems a very good summary of the way MS has deployed Clutter without enterprise consent, turned it on, and forced us to try and find a solution for disabling it globally. -
18 votes
Gary McCune supported this idea ·
An error occurred while saving the comment Gary McCune commented
This has always been a significant issue for compromised accounts where the user has fallen for a Phishing scheme as well.
When a password is reset it seems obvious that you would want to have all existing connections to that account severed. I can't think of any instances where you'd want to maintain existing connections for an account where the password has been reset.
-
19 votes
Gary McCune supported this idea ·
-
227 votes
Gary McCune supported this idea ·
We killed Teams because of this. Now it looks athough we need to squelch user's ability to make groups as well.
Please, Microsoft, please stop rolling out new O365 features before you have admin options in place to manage them.