Active Directory Rights Management Services Overview
Applies To: Windows Server 2012 R2, Windows Server 2012
Did you know that Microsoft Azure provides similar functionality in the cloud? Learn more about Microsoft Azure identity solutions. Create a hybrid identity solution in Microsoft Azure: - Learn about Azure Rights Management. - Deploy the Azure Rights Management Connector. |
This document provides an overview of Active Directory Rights Management Services (AD RMS) in Windows Server® 2012. AD RMS is the server role that provides you with management and development tools that work with industry security technologies—including encryption, certificates, and authentication—to help organizations create reliable information protection solutions.
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Role description
AD RMS can be used to augment the security strategy for your organization by protecting documents using information rights management (IRM).
AD RMS allows individuals and administrators through IRM policies to specify access permissions to documents, workbooks, and presentations. This helps prevent sensitive information from being printed, forwarded, or copied by unauthorized people. After permission for a file has been restricted by using IRM, the access and usage restrictions are enforced no matter where the information is, because the permission to a file is stored in the document file itself.
AD RMS and IRM help individuals enforce their personal preferences concerning the transmission of personal or private information. They also help organizations enforce corporate policy governing the control and dissemination of confidential or proprietary information.
Note
AD RMS running on Windows Server 2012 R2 or Windows Server 2012 meets the requirements of FIPS 140-2 when this server role is deployed as described in FIPS Compliance Issues for RMS.
Practical applications
IRM solutions that AD RMS enables are used to help provide the following:
Persistent usage policies, which remain with the information, no matter where it is moved, sent or forwarded.
An additional layer of privacy to protect sensitive information —such as financial reports, product specifications, customer data, and confidential e-mail messages—from intentionally or accidentally getting into the wrong hands.
Prevent an authorized recipient of restricted content from forwarding, copying, modifying, printing, faxing, or pasting the content for unauthorized use
Prevent restricted content from being copied by using the Print Screen feature in Microsoft Windows
Support file expiration so that content in documents can no longer be viewed after a specified period of time
Enforce corporate policies that govern the use and dissemination of content within the company
IRM-based solutions that AD RMS supports cannot prevent all types of threats to the security of sensitive documents or prevent disclosure of screen readable information under all circumstances. For example, the following are some types of document security threats that AD RMS does not address or mitigate:
Content from being erased, stolen, or captured and transmitted by malicious programs such as Trojan horses, keystroke loggers, and certain types of spyware
Content from being lost or corrupted because of the actions of computer viruses
Restricted content from being hand-copied or retyped from a display on a recipient's screen
A recipient from taking a digital photograph of the restricted content displayed on a screen
Restricted content from being copied by using third-party screen-capture programs
For more information about how AD RMS can be used to design secure document collaboration, see AD RMS Architecture Design and Secure Collaboration Scenarios.
For information about how AD RMS can secure all file types, see How RMS protects all file types – by using the RMS sharing app.
New and changed functionality
Several improvements have been made to the Windows Server 2012 version of AD RMS. These enhancements are covered online in the article What’s New in AD RMS?
Server Manager information
The installation of AD RMS role services can be performed through the Server Manager. The following role services can be installed:
Role service | Description |
---|---|
Active Directory Rights Management Server | The Active Directory Rights Management Server is a required role service that installs all AD RMS features used to publish and consume rights-protected content. |
Identity Federation Support | The identity federation support role service is an optional role service that allows federated identities to consume rights-protected content by using Active Directory Federation Services. |
Upgrading or migrating
If you are running a version of Rights Management that you want to upgrade or migrate to the latest version, use the following resources:
To upgrade or migrate to Active Directory Rights Management (AD RMS): RMS to AD RMS Migration and Upgrade Guide
To migrate to Azure Rights Management (Azure RMS): Migrating from AD RMS to Azure Rights Management
See also
The following table provides additional resources for evaluating AD RMS.