Detailing Best Practice for Groups

In the days before Windows Server 2003 and Exchange Server 2007, it was common to use domain local groups to control access to resources and use global groups to organize similar groups of users. When this is done, the global groups created are then applied to the domain local groups as members, allowing those users permissions to those resources and limiting the effect that replication has on an environment.

To illustrate this type of use, consider the example shown in Figure 6.9. Users in the Marketing and Finance departments need access to the same shared printer on the network. Two global groups named Marketing and Finance, respectively, were created and all user accounts from each respective group were ...

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