Dinostar77 wrote:Yossarian wrote:I can say it’s definitely not me. Hope that helps.
If it was Halo, the answer is automatically Yoss.
Dinostar77 wrote:Whos the biggest From Software (Souls/Bloodborne/Seiko) fan on this forum? Elf?
Matt_82 wrote:For the IT types:
If I'm at work using my personal tablet on the work's wifi, can they tell what I'm clicking on or looking at? Not that I'm looking at anything dodgy but I do browse reddit and often there's stuff there that's pretty NSFW. And I have various messenger groups where folk will share pretty risque memes etc.
So will some IT dude be able to see that someone has sent me a photo with tits in it?
acemuzzy wrote:Nobody said he was viewing anything illegal!
poprock wrote:Well I was talking about this boss:
davyK wrote:They can tell OK, provided they have the right tech in place.
Without a corporate login they can't tie your browsing back to your active directory entry. But if the wifi has a unqiue login obvs they could track your browsing. They could also track browsing against your device ID or mac address.
Shadow IT and the use of unapproved cloud services is a hot topic - esp. if the workforce is storing work data in cloud services that are not approved by work. That is a GDPR issue.
One gap that is a worry is split tunneling used by home workers. Home workers might use a VPN to connect to work but when using internet services are connected by them via their home broadband - so no visibility of what you are doing. An "always on" VPN gets rid of the split tunnel and routes all traffic through your work's internet connection which can then be monitored. That's OK with corporate devices but might need your employment Ts & Cs to cover having to have that installed on your personal device.
Of course always on VPN needs your IT to ensure the throughput of that is sufficient. We have 2x5Gb internet connections with load balancing in place now, but a firewall that could handle that amount of throughput is beyond our means - we are talking very large amounts of money. Instead of beefing up their firewalls, IT could use a cloud based security broker (CASEB) that your web and vpn connection flows through - that will monitor activity too. CASEB's aren't cheap either though...so it depends on how well your company is funding IT.
Implementing an always-on VPN is what I'm working on now, among other things. We are hoping to shift the load off our firewalls by doing things like routing O365 traffic directly. We can get O365 usage reports from the Azure/O365 admin console reporting.
GooberTheHat wrote:As previously mention, a vpn on your device will encrypt all your traffic so the only connection they will see is from your device to the vpn server. Messages, as long as they are sent on an encrypted app (such as WhatsApp) will be completely private.
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