Posted: under I.T. News, Rants.
Tags: personal, Web Surfing
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“Most people spend more than 25 per cent of their time online at work on personal activities. And 80 per cent of emails sent by volume in the workplace are personal. Bosses often have no way of tracking Internet activity or policies to define what staff can and cannot do. Paul Hortop, who reviews company network security for consultancy Voco, said the most common websites visited by personal web surfers were online trading sites, instant messaging/chat services and peer-to-peer sharing sites (allowing movie, music and software sharing).”
Sep 25 2008
Posted: under I.T. News, Rants.
Tags: Malware, Popup
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“Testing students at a University, psychologists made many of them click on a dialog box that in effect said: ‘You are about to install some malware. Malware is bad. By clicking yes you are failing the Windows Darwin Test.’ Nearly half of them said all they cared about was getting rid of these dialogs.”
Go get them and unplug your system and pack it up just like it was when you got it. Then take it back to the store you bought it from. Tell them you’re too stupid to own a computer.
Sep 23 2008
Posted: under I.T. News, Rants.
Tags: AT&T
a story from the business section of the L.A. Times which begins: “Judging from the phone company’s voluminous new online customer manual, if you have a problem with your bill, too bad: AT&T has sent customers an 8,000-word service agreement that, among other things, says people will be given 30-day notice of price increases only when ‘commercially reasonable’ and that you can’t sue the company. Oh, and if you don’t like AT&T’s terms — providing you can make your way through the company’s 2,500-page ‘guidebook’ — your only recourse is to cancel service.”
Nice customer service.
Sep 17 2008
Posted: under Rants.
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“A university student at Carleton is learning that no good deed goes unpunished. After hacking into what was probably a not-so-secure university network, this guy took the time to write a 16-page paper on his methods and sent it to the system admins. Sounds like White Hat behavior to me. Yes, he should have asked permission before trying, but throwing the book at the guy and wrecking his life with criminal charges (which stick for a long time) seems a little excessive. The university should spend money on hiring some admins with better computer skills and teaching skills rather than paying lawyers.
“The truth is, some university students are going to have the desire to hack something, and not all of them have the judgment to stay out of trouble. If you acknowledge that and catch them inside the university, you can straighten them out before they wreck their lives, and teach them to be white hats.
Sep 14 2008