I got an email from my friend Sean today. He is a good friend from college. He does GIS database work out in Las Vegas. I haven’t spoken to him in a while so it was good to here from him. He is online less now a days because they are monitoring web habits and frown on IM use. I of course gave him some tips on getting around the web police. As far as non IT guys go, he is very computer savvy, so I hope he can get on the internet at work without the corporate police getting on his back. Come on sean, IM me. Remember when you are at work, I am home. Gotta love that time difference!
I admit that I am a hypocrite. Things that Sean tells me that his company is doing are things I am either implementing or talking about deploying at my company. Yet I will tell him how to get around the system, while I am forcing it on others! Oddly I don’t seem to care. He is a friend, and I have a job to do!!!
My company is currently looking at proxy server software that will monitor web habits. We also deployed Jabber to all our employee’s. Jabber is an open source standard for IM. We purchased a windows based server from Tipic. Their are plenty of free distributions on linux/unix, but when we did our deployment I was not (still not) a linux expert so we stuck with a windows based product. With jabber we can limit IM access to internal use only. For some of our corporate staff we allow AIM to talk with people outside, but our call center is locked down. I actually love jabber. I think it is awesome and I use it all the time for talking to people in my company, but it is restrictive to some.
So for my friends not working with me I feel compelled to give them advise to get around security blocks a corporate IT staff may impose. For people in my company, I AM the corporate IT police. And yes it is kind of fun to lock stuff down. Not because you screw over people, but because it is a challenge. Restricting access to something always spawns people trying to break your restrictions. That cat and mouse game can be very interesting. Thankfully (or not) the users at my company are not much of a challenge, except for our development staff. And those guys don’t have many restrictions on web use, so they don’t count.