Upravit

Sdílet prostřednictvím


Manage the meeting presentation experience for sensitive Teams meetings

Information icon. Some features described in this article require Teams Premium.

As an admin, with Teams admin policies, sensitivity labels, and templates, you can control various settings that determine the in-meeting experience for participants, including:

  • Who can present and who can give or request control
  • How content is shared and what collaboration tools are available
  • Attendee video, audio, and reactions

Meeting organizers can specify some of theses settings when they create a meeting. However, you can enforce specific options for different users and groups in your organization by using admin policies. You can also use sensitivity labels and templates to enforce these options for different types or meetings. These options can help you with meetings in your organization where sensitive information is being shared.

Note

Meeting settings in sensitivity labels and custom meeting templates require Teams Premium.

Manage who can present

The following table shows where settings are available to manage who can present in meetings:

Setting Admin policy Sensitivity label Template Meeting organizer
Who can present Yes Yes No Yes
Participants can give or request control Yes No No No
External participants can give or request control Yes No No No

By using these controls, you can limit who can share content on screen in meetings.

Default value for who can present in meetings

The Teams admin meeting policy Who can present has the following options:

  • Only organizers and co-organizers
  • People in my org and guests
  • Everyone

This setting doesn't enforce the value, but rather specifies the default for new meetings created by users. Users can override this setting and choose any of the other options unless a sensitivity label enforces a specific value.

The default value of Everyone allows anyone to present in a meeting by default. If you have compliance requirements in your organization around who can present in meetings, consider changing this value to People in my org and guests or Only organizers and co-organizers to provide a more secure default for users.

To manage the Who can present policy, follow these steps:

  1. In the Teams admin center, expand Meetings, and then select Meeting policies.
  2. Select the policy that you want to edit.
  3. In the Meeting join & lobby section, select a value for Who can present.
  4. Select Save.

Manage who can present by using sensitivity labels

Meeting organizers can choose from the following options for who can present in a meeting:

  • People in my org and guests
  • Only me and co-organizers
  • Specific people
  • Everyone

The Who can present policy specifies the default value shown when a user creates a meeting.

You can restrict this setting by using a sensitivity label. For sensitive or highly sensitive meetings, consider restricting this setting to Only me and co-organizers or Specific people by using a sensitivity label.

Teams admin policy: Participants can give or request control

By default, meeting participants can give control of their shared screen to another participant in the meeting. Two Teams admin meeting policies control this capability:

  • Participants can give or request control - This setting determines whether the user with this policy can give control of their shared desktop or window to other meeting participants. It's On by default.

  • External participants can give or request control - This setting determines a guest or anonymous participant can be given control of an internal user's shared screen. It's Off by default.

Depending on the compliance requirements of your organization, you can change these settings for some or all of your users.

To configure who can give control of a shared screen, follow these steps:

  1. In the Teams admin center, expand Meetings, and then select Meeting policies.
  2. Select the policy that you want to modify.
  3. Under Content sharing:
    • To prevent participants from giving control of a screen share to others, set Participants can give or request control to Off.

    • To prevent external participants from being given control of a screen share, set External participants can give or request control to On.

  4. Select Save.

Manage which content and video is shared with attendees

In meetings where sensitive information is being shared, it can be important to minimize the risk of sharing inappropriate information.

The following table shows settings that can help manage what content and video is shared on screen in meetings.

Setting Admin policy Sensitivity label Template Meeting organizer
Screen sharing Yes No No No
Manage what attendees see No No Yes Yes

Screen sharing is a Teams admin policy. With this policy, you can control if meeting attendees can share their entire screen or only a single application. Sharing the entire screen can be convenient, but it can increase the chances of accidentally sharing inappropriate information such as an email or open document. Consider if you want to restrict sharing to a single application for users or departments that often present sensitive information. You can also turn off screen sharing entirely with this policy. For more information, see Manage meeting policies for content sharing.

Manage what attendees see is an option available to meeting organizers that can also be set by using a template. When this option is enabled, meeting organizers can control what content is shared on screen and who's video is visible. Organizers must intentionally bring shared content and video on screen before attendees can see it. This feature can help minimize the risk of sharing inappropriate content in a meeting. Consider if you want to enable or enforce this experience for sensitive meetings by using a meeting template. For more information, see Manage what attendees see in Teams meetings.

Manage presentation tools

Teams offers several presentation tools that allow for interactive participation of meeting attendees. The following table shows features that can help manage these tools.

Setting Admin policy Sensitivity label Template Meeting organizer
PowerPoint Live Yes No No No
Whiteboard Yes No No No
Shared notes Yes No No No

Each of these features can be managed through admin policies, but not through templates or sensitivity labels, nor by the meeting organizer. As such, they can be applied to users or groups, but not to specific meetings. For more information, see Meeting policy settings - Content sharing.

You might want to turn off Whiteboard and shared notes to avoid having sensitive information added to specific meetings.

PowerPoint Live allows attendees to navigate forward and back in a PowerPoint presentation being shared on screen. However, attendees might see sensitive information before the organizer presents it.

Consider if there are users or groups in your organization who shouldn't use these features to avoid sharing sensitive information.

Manage how meeting attendees interact

The following table shows features that can help manage how meeting attendees interact during a meeting.

Setting Admin policy Sensitivity label Template Meeting organizer
Allow camera for attendees No No Yes Yes
Allow mic for attendees No No Yes Yes
Reactions Yes No Yes Yes

Attendee audio and video can make it easy for attendees to communicate during a meeting. The meeting organizer or a meeting template can control both of these features. Depending on the type of meeting, you might want to allow or restrict these capabilities.

For meetings that are presentations with minimal interaction from attendees, turning off audio and video can minimize distractions. You could also advise meeting organizers to use a town hall instead. For details on town halls, see [Plan for town halls(plan-town-halls.md).

When users record meetings, video from participants might be considered personal data and can infer regulatory requirements.

If you choose to turn off reactions, remember that this option disables the hand-raise feature. (For presentation-style meetings, the Q&A feature might allow the needed interaction for attendees to ask questions.)