Posted on 09/20/2007 6:13:50 AM PDT by decimon
Jeffrey W. Keener is a corporate keymasterone of a rapidly growing number of security professionals who can unlock all your office secrets. Whether youre on a PC in the next room or a Mac in Madagascar, Keener is just a few keystrokes away from watching the contents of strangers hard drives whiz by. It may seem Orwellian, but this constant monitoring is a crucial cog in the well-oiled machine of business investigationand one more inevitable tick on the countdown to a surveillance society. I saw it in action last week at the fourth-floor New York satellite office of California-based Guidance Software (which boasts Halliburton, Lowes and many Fortune 500 companies among its clients), as Keener called up one of his surveillance programs.
(Excerpt) Read more at popularmechanics.com ...
I guess my problem with this is that it is no better than the people using it. How would the people you work for use this?
Anybody that's using a company PC and thinks that they're not being monitored should probably think again. If you're at work (for a company with a decent sized IT department) and on FR right now, chances are your employer is aware of it. Food for thought.
Is this him?
That rings too true. All is fair.
There’s a guy who’s seen too much.
I'm sure they are. Periodically IT locks out a bunch of web sites including FR. It usually takes no more than 2 hours for FR to get unlocked. I can only conclude that someone in the executive management likes FR and scalds the butts of the internet Cary Nations in IT.
Hey FRiends...It’s a WORK computer.
Don’t surf FR, popular mechanics, naughty cheerleaders, the stock market, NASCAR or anything else your boss might object to.
You're...uhh...not on the job right now, are you?
I AM the boss!
So much for that leadership by example stuff. :-)
What happens if one uses a corporate laptop from home, connecting to the web via personal high-speed connection. Is there software that monitors this as well?
Then write yourself up. ;-)
Yup. I kept having trouble with our IT people blocking me from conservative websites. If I went to Rush everyday, suddenly it would be blocked. Same with Laura Ingraham website. It never happened with FR though. I think they just were'nt saavy enough to know what it was. I experimented and went to Air America for a few days. Nothing happened. It was easy to tell that it was personal. This was just lunchtime surfing, mind you. I resolved the issue by bringing my own laptop from home.
Get back to work.
Or yer fired.
“They can’t trace you, Laz, you have Zone Alarm!”
Heh. I work for a fairly small company (government contractor). Some time back, the IT guys came by my office and installed some ‘updates’ to my Win2k dell laptop. Made it all but unusable. I bought a new hard drive for it, and installed Linux on it. A couple of weeks later one of the IT guys came by my office again, and said “something’s wrong with your computer...we can’t access it from the network”. I told him what I’d done, and he just shrugged his shoulders and left. I haven’t heard anything more from them, and it’s been several months.
Be on the lookout for Suburbans.
Trust and respect is a two way deal, if they treat employees like potential criminals, businesses may get back what they dish out.
Businesses have a right to watch out for malicious intrusions from outside their networks and to watch out for disloyal employees sending proprietary information to outside competitors. That right should be exercised in a balanced manner that does not unduly intrude on other employees who do their jobs well and browse the Internet on breaks for news or harmless entertainment.
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