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- Home Email Microsoft® Exchange 2013. Launching Outlook Web App (OWA) With the Outlook Web App (OWA), you can access your Microsoft Exchange 2013 account using any web browser to manage your emails. Any computer (PC, Mac) or mobile device (laptop, smartphone, tablet) with a web browser and Internet access.
- With the power of the Office Web Apps, users can continue to view and edit these files safely, without leaking data to a personal machine. If you instead want to block attachments fully (when on a non-compliant device) we also support that! Steps to Configuring Conditional Access / Limited Access for Outlook on the Web.
Create, reply to, or forward email messages in Outlook on the web. Reply, reply all, or forward an email message. Create, reply to, or forward email messages in Outlook on the web. Print an email message. Printing email and calendars in Outlook on the web. Create an email folder. Working with message folders in Outlook on the web. Delete an email folder. Working with message folders in Outlook on the web. Search for a piece of mail. Outlook Web Access Access your email through the Office 365 Portal. Navigate to Office 365 Login Page: (O365 service login) Or (Direct OWA URL) Login using your SOM Email address and network password; Click the application you desire to use when the portal launches.
-->Outlook on the web (formerly known as Outlook Web App or Outlook Web Access) is a browser-based email client. Outlook on the web lets you access your Microsoft Exchange Server mailbox from almost any web browser.
If you are a Microsoft Office 365 user, click the following link to access Office 365 Outlook Web App:
How to set up Exchange on the web to access Exchange Server
To set up Outlook Web App to access Exchange Server, follow these steps:
- Ask your network administrator or local Helpdesk to see whether your account has Outlook Web App enabled. If Outlook Web App is enabled, ask the administrator or Helpdesk for the address (URL) of Outlook Web App. Usually, the address is in the following form:https://<Domain Name>/OWANormally, you can find the Outlook Web App URL by clicking File->Info in Outlook.NoteThis feature is available on Outlook 2010 and Outlook 2013. It depends on the server side settings.
- Open a web browser such as Internet Explorer, type the Outlook Web App address in the address bar, and then press Enter.
- If you receive the following certificate warning page, click Continue to this website (not recommended) to continue to open Outlook Web App.NoteThis certificate warning is displayed if an incorrect certificate is being used in the Exchange server. Report this issue to the network administrator.
- On the Outlook Web App sign-in page, type your user name and password, and then click Sign in. The user name must be in one of the following formats:
- [email protected]
- Domain/username
NoteIn most cases, the user name and password are the logon name and password that you use to log on to your organization's network or computer.If you don't know your Outlook Web App user name and password, you should contact the network administrator.
If you're an Office 365 customer with Exchange Online mailboxes, you can use the built-in reporting options in Outlook on the web (formerly known as Outlook Web App) to submit false positives (good email marked as spam), false negatives (bad email allowed) and phishing messages to Exchange Online Protection (EOP).
What do you need to know before you begin?
![Owa microsoft outlook web access Owa microsoft outlook web access](/uploads/1/2/6/4/126465820/976646927.png)
- If you're an admin in an Office 365 organization with Exchange Online mailboxes, we recommend that you use the Submissions portal in the Office 365 Security & Compliance Center. For more information, see Use Admin Submission to submit suspected spam, phish, URLs, and files to Microsoft.
- Admins can disable or enable the ability for users to report messages to Microsoft in Outlook on the web. For details, see the Disable or enable junk email reporting in Outlook on the web section later in this topic.
- For more information about reporting messages to Microsoft, see Report messages and files to Microsoft in Office 365.
Report spam and phishing messages in Outlook on the web
- For messages in the Inbox or any other email folder except Junk Email, use either of the following methods to report spam and phishing messages:
- Select the message, click Junk on the toolbar, and then select Junk or Phishing.
- Select one or more messages, right-click, and then select Mark as junk.
- In the dialog that appears, click Report. If you change your mind, click Don't Report.
- The selected messages will be sent to Microsoft for analysis. To confirm that the messages have been submitted, open your Sent Items folder to view the submitted messages.
Report non-spam and phishing messages from the Junk Email folder in Outlook on the web
Owa Microsoft Outlook Web Access
- In the Junk Email folder, use either of the following methods to report spam false positives or phishing messages:
- Select the message, click Not Junk on the toolbar, and then select Not Junk or Phishing.
- Select one or more messages, right-click, and then select Mark as not junk.
- In the dialog that appears, read the information and click Report. If you change your mind, click Don't Report.
- The selected messages will be sent to Microsoft for analysis. To confirm that the messages have been submitted, open your Sent Items folder to view the submitted messages.
Disable or enable junk email reporting in Outlook on the web
By default, users can report spam false positives, false negatives, and phishing messages to Microsoft for analysis in Outlook on the web. Admins can configure Outlook on the web mailbox policies in Exchange Online PowerShell to prevent users from reporting spam false positives and spam false negatives to Microsoft. You can't disable the ability for users to report phishing messages to Microsoft.
What do you need to know before you begin?
- To connect to Exchange Online PowerShell, see Connect to Exchange Online PowerShell.
- You need to be assigned permissions before you can perform these procedures. Specifically you need the Recipient Policies or Mail Recipients roles in Exchange Online, which are assigned to the Organization Management and Recipient Management role groups by default. For more information about role groups in Exchange Online, see Modify role groups in Exchange Online.
- Every organization has a default policy named OwaMailboxPolicy-Default, but you can create custom policies. Custom policies are applied to scoped users before the default policy. For more information about Outlook on the web mailbox policies, see Outlook on the web mailbox policies in Exchange Online.
- Disabling junk email reporting doesn't remove the ability to mark a message as junk or not junk in Outlook on the web. Selecting a message in the Junk email folder and clicking Not junk > Not junk still moves the message back into the Inbox. Selecting a message in any other email folder and clicking Junk > Junk still moves the message into the Junk Email folder. What's no longer available is the option to report the message to Microsoft.
Use Exchange Online PowerShell to disable or enable junk email reporting in Outlook on the web
- To find your existing Outlook on the web mailbox policies and the status of junk email reporting, run the following command:
- To disable or enable junk email reporting in Outlook on the web, use the following syntax:This example disables junk email reporting in the default policy.This example enables junk email reporting in the custom policy named Contoso Managers.
For detailed syntax and parameter information, see Get-OwaMailboxPolicy and Set-OwaMailboxPolicy.
How do you know this worked?
![Microsoft outlook web access email Microsoft outlook web access email](/uploads/1/2/6/4/126465820/215949207.jpg)
Microsoft Owa
To verify that you've successfully enabled or disabled junk email reporting in Outlook on the web, use any of the following steps:
- In Exchange Online PowerShell, run the following command and verify the ReportJunkEmailEnabled property value:
- Open an affected user's mailbox in Outlook on the web, select a message in the Inbox, click Junk > Junk and verify the prompt to report the message to Microsoft is or is not displayed.*
- Open an affected user's mailbox in Outlook on the web, select a message in the Junk Email folder, click Junk > Junk and verify the prompt to report the message to Microsoft is or is not displayed.*
* Users can hide the prompt to report the message while still reporting the message. To check this setting in Outlook on the web:
- Click Settings > View all Outlook settings > Junk email.
- In the Reporting section, verify the value: Ask me before sending a report.