Microsoft has addressed a known issue affecting Outlook for Microsoft 365 customers that prevented them from accessing group mailboxes and calendars using the Outlook desktop client.
The buggy Outlook version was released to the Current Channel on March 28, and the fix is rolling out to all impacted users with Outlook Desktop Version 2304 Build 16327.20214.
"A recent standard service update inadvertently contains an authentication code regression which is resulting in some users being unable to access or perform various Microsoft 365 group actions in the Outlook desktop client," the company described the issue under EX540503 in the Microsoft 365 admin center.
"Users may be unable to view or access Microsoft 365 group calendars and email messages in the Outlook desktop client."
To install the update that addresses this issue, affected Outlook users must go to File > Office Account > Update Options and click 'Update Now.'
Microsoft 365 group users affected by this known issue may experience problems when attempting to perform one or more of the following actions using the Outlook desktop client:
- Add or access the group mailbox
- Add or access the group calendar
- Add, remove, or edit group members
- Mark emails or items as read
- Flag, archive, or move mail or items to other folders
Affected users asked to re-enable updates
Microsoft also shared a temporary workaround to help impacted users regain access to their email messages and group calendars unit a fix was ready.
The company advised them to switch to using Outlook Web Access (OWA) or revert to Outlook Desktop build 16130.20332, which wasn't impacted by this issue.
As the final step of reverting Outlook to the older version, Microsoft also advised customers to disable updates to prevent the software from returning to the buggy version.
"If you reverted and disabled updates, please remember to re-enable updates now that the fix is available," Microsoft said today.
While Microsoft said in the admin center that this known issue's impact was limited to a small number of users on versions 16.0.16222.10000 or higher, it was likely underestimated, given the stream of user reports shared online starting earlier this month.
Comments
Quadroodlesublimated - 11 months ago
I am a naive home user. I have suggested to Microsoft a few times, that easily 90% of every paying Office 365, Outlook OWA, Outlook Desktop USER would agree to pay just $1.00 (ONE Dollar) more for their subscription, IF ONLY Microsoft were to agree and follow through with applying that extra 345 million a year (AS OF 2023) specifically to PRE-RELEASE TESTING OF THEIR SOFTWARE. (You can google the numbers I use here yourself, because this is not an PHD candidate project).
However, since MS Office & Outlook paying customers already brought in about $63 Billion in 2022, (a number you can find via Googling the question "How many paying Office & Outlook users are there now 2023", it seems to me (who can be wrong because human,eh) that the piddly $345 million extra is simply not enough to "move the needle of the tiny conscience within the brains of any MSFT CEO, Manager, lawyer, software engineer, expert, marketing & public relations person".
You can see how it came to be that I was banned from the MSFT "community blog or help system" because too much truthiness cannot be handled by the above-mentioned peeps.
So I leave you with a riddle: The software is too hard, and the hardware is too soft! What could I possibly mean by that?