
Explanation:
Yes , Yes, No
To determine whether each statement is true or false, let's analyze the provided information step by step based on the sensitivity label settings and the user permissions associated with the files.
Given Information:
Users and Subscriptions:
User1: Contoso subscription, email:
[email protected]User2: Contoso subscription, email:
[email protected]User3: Fabrikam subscription, email:
[email protected]User4: Fabrikam subscription, email:
[email protected]Files and Sensitivity Label Application:
File1: Automatically applied Sensitivity1 using an auto-labeling policy File2: Applied by User2 File3: Applied by User1 Sensitivity Label (Sensitivity1) Assumptions: Since the exhibit for the sensitivity label is not fully detailed, we need to make reasonable assumptions based on typical Microsoft 365 sensitivity label behavior.
Sensitivity labels can restrict access based on user permissions, subscription boundaries, or specific configurations (e.g., allowing only users within the same organization to edit or view). Given the context of two separate subscriptions (Contoso and Fabrikam), it's likely that Sensitivity1 restricts access to users within the same subscription unless explicitly configured otherwise. A common default for such labels is to allow editing and other rights only to users within the applying user's organization, with possible restrictions for cross-subscription access.
Key Assumptions:
Sensitivity1 likely encrypts the files and restricts editing rights to users within the same subscription as the user who applied the label or where the auto-labeling policy is configured.
File1 (auto-applied) would inherit permissions based on the policy, likely restricting access to Contoso users if the policy is set up within the Contoso subscription.
File2 (applied by User2 from Contoso) would restrict access to Contoso users.
File3 (applied by User1 from Contoso) would also restrict access to Contoso users.
Users from Fabrikam (User3, User4) would not have edit rights unless explicitly granted, which is unlikely given the separation of subscriptions.
Statement Analysis:
User1 can edit rights for File1.
File1 was automatically applied with Sensitivity1 using an auto-labeling policy. Since the policy is likely configured within the Contoso subscription (where User1 resides), User1, as a Contoso user, should have edit rights unless the policy explicitly restricts this. Given User1's affiliation with Contoso, this is typically allowed.
# Answer: Yes
User2 can edit rights for File3.
File3 was applied by User1, who is from the Contoso subscription. Since User2 is also from the Contoso subscription, they should have edit rights unless the label configuration explicitly denies this for other users within the same subscription. Typically, users within the same organization can edit files labeled by another user from the same organization.
# Answer: Yes
User3 can print File2.
File2 was applied by User2, who is from the Contoso subscription. Sensitivity1 likely restricts access to Contoso users only. User3 is from the Fabrikam subscription, which is a separate entity. Unless cross-sub Answer : No