Why YSK: It appears several Lemmy Instances are flagged as suspicious and at least 1 instance intentionally using the name of ransomware. A couple of the big enterprise monitoring suites (Fortiguard, ZScaler) will flag your account and may end up with you being pulled into an office for an explanation, or worse.

TL;DR: Keep browsing to your local instance at work for now.

  • @ludwig
    link
    21 year ago

    Alright. Seems reasonable as long as the devices are sandboxed from the company network and resources.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      21 year ago

      They aren’t, and our private phones are also connected to the network ;)

      But then again, it’s a fairly large organization vpn’d up over multiple locations, with server farms in different VLANs and so on, so the network we usually access when working are in a different subnet.

      I do know what you mean though - it really depends on what the company does. Prior, I worked at a company that developed and manufactured hardware cryptography devices - I learned proper security procedures there :) our ‘actual work computers’ weren’t even connected to the Internet, and the unmanaged laptops accessed the same WiFi guests would access that, well, only went to the Internet. Just wpa2.

      • @ludwig
        link
        11 year ago

        They aren’t, and our private phones are also connected to the network ;)

        Why though‽ Most consumer routers even have a guest network enabled by default.

        it really depends on what the company does.

        That’s true, but an attack could probably cause a lot of damage to any company (especially a big one) without proper security. Regardless of what they do.

        Well at least you don’t have to deal with ITs PC policies, which can get pretty annoying. Allowing any device to join the company network seems incredibly stupid though.

        Let’s just hope that none of your unmanaged machines get compromised.

        At my previous company, only domain work computers could join the PC WiFi (with a certificate, so no passwords) and work smartphones could only join the work WiFi for mobiles.

        Private devices and very limited amount of non domain computers were only allowed on the guest network and couldn’t connect to any other.

        The company didn’t do anything special that needed extra security.