Before you can act as a proxy for someone, that person must give you proxy rights in his or her Access List. As a mailbox owner, you can assign each user different rights to your calendaring and messaging information. For example, if you want to let users view specific information about your appointments when they do a busy search on your Calendar, give them Read access for appointments.
Keep in mind the following when setting up Proxy access to your mailbox:
Proxies cannot see your Contacts folder at any time.
Proxies cannot archive items from your mailbox because the archive directory is typically a local directory that a proxy cannot access.
After a proxy user opens a mail message, the message is displayed both to the proxy user and to the mailbox owner as having been opened. If a mailbox owner wants messages that have been opened by a proxy user to be displayed as not having been read, then the mailbox owner can ask the proxy user to mark items as Read Later after the proxy user has viewed a message. There is no way for a mailbox owner to know if a proxy user has opened a message.
To grant another user proxy rights to your mailbox:
Click
> .Double-click
, then click the tab.To add a user to the list, type the name in the
field, then when the full name appears, click .Click a user in the Access List.
Select the rights you want to give to the user.
Read: Read items you receive.
Write: Create and send items in your name, including applying your signature (if you have one defined). Assign categories to items, change the subject of items, perform tasklist options on items, and delete items.
Subscribe to my alarms: Receive the same alarms you receive. Receiving alarms is supported only if the proxy is on the same post office you are.
Subscribe to my notifications: Receive notification when you receive items. Receiving notifications is supported only if the proxy is on the same post office you are.
Modify options/folders: Change the options in your Mailbox. The proxy can edit any of your Options settings, including the access given to other users. If the proxy also has Mail rights, he or she can create or modify folders.
Read items marked Private: Read the items you marked Private. If you don’t give a proxy Private rights, all items marked Private in your Mailbox are hidden from that proxy.
Repeat Step 4 and Step 5 to assign rights to each user in the Access List.
You can select
in the Access List and assign rights to all users in the Address Book. For example, if you want all users to have rights to read your mail, you would assign Read rights to All User Access.To delete a user from the Access List, click the user, then click
.Click
.