Archive for February, 2007

25
Feb

Windows Cash Machine = Bad Idea

This is why I cringed a few years ago when I first heard our new ATM machines would be windows XP based.

Bad Idea

There was some cheap ATM machine touch screen thing at Cinema 9, but it was blank cept for a gray line at the bottom. Touch. Taskbar. Start menu. Programs. Accessories. Paint.

Take a look…

20
Feb

The Shadow IT Department

Over the last few years I’ve found I’m becoming more and more sensitive of the ever-widening gap between what we as IT/Security people do to protect the user from themselves, and giving the end user the freedom and support to use the best tools available to get real work done. There are a lot of great apps and other tech out there that corporations tend to quickly dismiss as “non-approved”, unneeded and/or frivolous toys. So I was pleasantly surprised when I noticed this excellent article over at the CIO Magazine website about corporate users ever-increasing knowledge and use of consumer technology to get things done, regardless of corporate IT Policy.

These are your employees, and their message couldn’t be clearer: Technology, at least in their eyes, has made them significantly more productive. But CIOs shouldn’t be patting themselves on the back just yet. For this productivity boost the study credits the Internet, not enterprise IT, not the technology you provide, not, in short, you. And while Pew’s finding undoubtedly includes people who use the Internet to access your corporate applications, Lee Rainie, the Pew project director, says the research is not pointing to what a good job CIOs have been doing.

The author has some great tips on how to harness that “Shadow IT” and use it to advance your goals instead of rallying against it. I would love to hear how other IT/security folks deal with this. I always try to balance security needs along with giving the users the tools needed to help them get work done. After all, that is why we are there in the first place. =)

09
Feb

Professor questioned on Tor Usage

A member of the campuses’ IT security team and 2 campus police officers showed up on a Bowling Green State University Professor’s doorstep after discovering he was using TOR.

I recognized the speaker as a network-security technician in my university’s office of information-technology services. The other men were not familiar, but a quick glance at their cards told me they were detectives on our campus police force. They closed my office door behind them, sat down, took out notepads and pens, and asked if I had a few minutes to speak with them about Tor.

Read the full article…




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