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Universally Available Remote Internet Connection

Posted by admin on Nov 23, 2008 in Remote Internet

There just isn’t such a thing.

Every week I open up a new trade magazine and there will be some sort of article or ad that says - “Internet Wherever You Are”, or “We Serve the Planet”. So in my continuing naivete - same reason I buy lottery tickets - I’ll go to whatever website is advertised and start reading the details. It’s always a lunch-box-letdown. Read more…

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Controlling Web Access and Bell Novatel Modems

Posted by admin on Nov 2, 2008 in Image Development, Information Security, Remote Internet

Part of my plan to control web access is to funnel all communications through a proxy server with a whitelist of work-approved web sites. To do this, I have to set each method of connection to the Internet to use the proxy server. With Telus’ AirCard’s the process is simple since each connection type is persistent. What I mean by that is that when the card is removed from the computer, all of it’s settings still stay.

Bell doesn’t play that way. Read more…

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Report: Energy Companies Are Top Target of Web-Borne Malware

Posted by admin on Oct 22, 2008 in Information Security, Uncategorized

Dark Reading and ScanSafe bring us this report about the top five targets for web-borne malware attacks. Guess who’s number 1? Yes, the Oil and Gas Industry. But why and what can be done about it? Read more…

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Computers Are Useless…

Posted by admin on Oct 21, 2008 in Uncategorized

…they can only provide answers. At least that’s what Salvidor Dali supposedly said.  I think I also read that quote was attributed to Pablo Picasso as well. I read it on the Web. So, maybe that quote should be adjusted to read, “…they can only provide answers, and some of them are right!”

Read more…

 
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Controlling Web Access in the Workplace

Posted by admin on Oct 13, 2008 in Image Development, Information Security, Remote Support

When I took my current position, part of my mandate was to find a way to stop the field users from accessing web sites that could be the source of malware or viruses. (By the way, it should be virii, but what the heck.)

I found a way to do that by creating a white list in Internet Explorer. What I did was point all connections to a proxy server of 127.0.0.1 with the exception of the domain names and IP addresses of sites that the user needed to perform their duties. It worked.

But it wasn’t ideal. If a site changed any of the URL’s or IP’s then that also had to be changed on each and every field computer and had to be done hands-on by me. You can see the problem with that.

Read more…

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