Sunday, May 23, 2010

My boss does not let us check our personal email at work. I have been using a proxy for email/surfing. Do you?

think I will get caught??? Any help would be great.if you know of any other tricks, feel free to share them.

My boss does not let us check our personal email at work. I have been using a proxy for email/surfing. Do you?
If your boss has anyone in the IT department with half a brain not only do they know you are using the proxy but they have probably recorded the contents of all your emails and everywhere else you have been.





However, your bigger concern is that you are using one of the thousands of proxy's run by hackers and that you have infected your entire workplace with software that allows the hackers to use your bosses computers for their hacking and credit card fraud. Think FBI at your door one day. There is a reason this stuff is blocked.





If you want to check your mail form work get yourself a laptop with an EVDO card, or an iPhone or similar and do it on your dime.
Reply:How poor of your boss? haha, I think he should just let you check your mail but not surf net. Anyway, You could try this





http://www.fogxy.com


http://www.huntc.com





it might help you to be able to check your mail.
Reply:your boss is a jerk nothing wrong with checking your personal email during your lunch anyway keep using your proxy and clean your tracks by using this


http://www.ccleaner.com/
Reply:why not trying to use a web proxy


your boss will only know that you visiting some site





try get one at http://dailyproxylist.info
Reply:Nope - I do the same thing and I'm not nervous at all. I use http://www.proxykey.com to check the stuff that is blocked otherwise.
Reply:um.... google ultrasurf and use that.


1 comment:

  1. I’m a consultant working with Palo Alto Networks, a network security company that helps enterprises manage social networking apps on the corporate network. IT departments are stuck between a rock and a hard place. They know that end-users and the business units will revolt if these apps are outright blocked. At the same time, they know these apps carry risks and can’t leave them unchecked. It requires a good balance between enablement and security. There is a good whitepaper on the subject of blocking social networking apps, “To Block or Not. Is that the question?”
    http://bit.ly/d2NZRp
    It has lots of insightful and useful information about identifying and controlling Enterprise 2.0 apps (Facebook, Twitter, Skype, AIM, SharePoint, etc.)
    Let me know what you think!
    Kelly@briefworld.com
    Share it with your IT Dept.

    ReplyDelete

 

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