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Admin
Admin
Admin
But at least their security policies are well enforced.
(Hint to security people: computers don't execute policy. They execute code. When you're done perfecting your policy, you might want to spare a minute to look at what the code is doing.)
Admin
Admin
It almost sounds like a self-inflicted virus.
Admin
Correct response - "I quit..."
Headaches like that aren't worth the hassle. Sooner or later, that company will have to start changing policies properly.
(Captcha: "Causa", yep, this is the causa lotta problems.)
Admin
Oops did the network cable get unplugged? Let me plug it back in after the script finishes. Great now I can replace LOGON.EXE with notepad.exe problem solved.
Admin
On the upside, if a user rejects the agreement, they can't download any porn if the machine keeps rebooting.
Just curious: what if they're trying to login to a machine that is also running some control software on the production line? You know, the way support folks sometimes do? So not only is the login refused, but the entire machine cycles?
I can just hear it now: Hey, why TF did the whole production line just shut down? Sorry, I mis-clicked and it rebooted.
Admin
Admin
A company gets to tell me just one time that my saving their arse was the wrong move. After that, I follow policy, even if it destroys the company.
Luckily, most companies aren't stupid enough to berate someone that saved them tons of money. And shutting the plant down for the weekend? That's expensive.
Admin
The real problem is the rediculous attitude of the CFO and the company buying his crap.
Because CFO had no way of rejecting a policy that is even against the law (sexual harrassment), he seems to be under the assumption that he has the right to violate it.
Interesting. I have never explicitly accepted the fact that it is against the law to murder anyone, therefore the next time I will murder anyone the Police ought to give me a sheet with "No more murdering. Accept/Reject?" and set me free in case I Accept or keep me in jail if I decide to Reject.
America: the place where the rule book reigns over common sense at all times.
Admin
errm.... is there some law requirement i don't understand or why do they display that policy every time you log in?
here in the company where I work (Switzerland) every employee signs an agreement (PAPER!) when hired and that's it...
Admin
Well, if that kind of machine is plugged to the whole network and is also under the same AD domain (or whatever is called) you've got a bigger WTF in your hands.
Admin
Had a similar incident where bad code got released and the person that released it never made a rollback copy. The fix was trivial (just a missing file), but no one that had proper access was able to be reached. Month end, bills had to go out... so I made a local copy that could point to production and gave it to my colleague running the billing software to use instead. He was able to get everything out on time.
Come Monday, my boss wrote me an official reprimand for violating policies. When I asked him what the "correct" solution was in that scenario, he admitted there was none other than what I did.
Before I left the company, the issue came up again. I followed policy this time and we lost $10,000+ in interest alone until my boss was available.
When you live in a world of black and white, you will lose when the roulette ball hits green.
Admin
We do it here because it's on the list of things that the auditors (federal and state) want to see when they check us annually, and if it's not there we get dinged in the report and have to explain to the board of directors why we don't have it.
"It's a pointless waste of time" < "The Feds say do it"
Admin
localhost, sweet localhost
Admin
I take it you never working in validation / test? Happened repeatedly at IBM.
Admin
(Not an American of any sort...)
Admin
Admin
Here in America, stupidity and ignorance are commonly-accepted mitigating factors for people to escape responsibility, and it's flat-out the law in Georgia.
... or haven't you been watching our Presidential elections the last 12 years or so?
Admin
This repeated showing of the agreement is made of the same stuff. It's not exactly about stupidity as such, but more about trying to plug any wiggle-room for the sort of bloody-minded individual who was working as CFO for this company.
And no, it isn't any harder to fire a CFO for gross misconduct than any other employee, especially in the country between Mexico and Canada. (It's more embarrassing, perhaps, but not more difficult.)
Admin
{Boom}
Another whining liberal socialist cheater goodfornothing marxist thief gone to his just reward...
Admin
Actually, she is smart. In some circumstances, especially if it is managed to be defined as a contract of adhesion or something similar, having proven that the person indeed did provably inform themselves of every section and had the opportunity to comment on or change them could be a defense to it. Did you know in Canada anti-drunk driving clauses in rental car contracts have been considered unenforceable for similar reasons?
Admin
By reading this comment, you agree to abide by our IT policies (123.6, 216.2, and 551.A).
Of course, TRWTF is using Windows to manage mission-critical hardware. Windows servers are bad enough, but locked-down corporate workstations?
It's enough to make you feel illum (captcha)
Admin
To be fair, exactly that phrase was in a comment immediately afterwards.
Admin
Admin
There's no place like ROOT# because I am the king of my castle!
Admin
Haven't seen initialling sections, but it's common here on certain types of contracts to require the bottom of each page to be initialled.
I assume this proves you read that page, and the other party cannot replace the sheet by a different version later on.
Admin
It virus like self like almost sounds-inflicted a.
Admin
As a rule of thumb:
Never deploy new software on Friday if you value your weekend.
Admin
Not that an errant login script randomly replacing files in system32 is a good thing, but the correct way to fix this is to deploy your dependencies along side your executable... that is not in system32 but into the application directory. Alternatively, letting the IT folks shut down prod for a weekend might be a better way to make them play nice with their customers.
Admin
You put cornify on "sexual"?
Remy is a dirty clopper.
Admin
This didn't happen to me. But damn if it doesn't sound like most of the companies I have worked for.
Admin
Why did they wait until friday at 6:00 pm then go home? If I were to deploy something that might potentially bring down the entire network (or render all the computers on the network inoperable, same thing) I'd do it Monday morning, and plan on being at work late into the night.
Admin
Remy still doesn't grok em dashes. Either that or the posting interface is turning them into single hyphens and he's too busy embedding stupid hidden crap to FIX THEM.
Admin
What I like is the problem caused by the CFO could have been resolved without technology at all.
Re-word the logon policy to say something like:
"Clicking 'OK' and continuing to use corporate systems constitutes agreement with this policy. If you do not agree with this policy, click 'OK' then log off immediately."
Problem solved.
Admin
Admin
Excellent. Problem(s) solved.
captcha: quibis; They quibis'd about the problem...We solved it.
Admin
I had a prof in college who had previously worked for British Rail. He said that the union there -- and I don't know if this was that particular union's idea or something many of them do, I've never heard of it elsewhere, whatever -- he said the union there had a negotiating tactic they used when things got nasty that they called "to rule". When the company wouldn't agree to the union's demands, the union would retaliate by following ALL company policies to the letter. They would assign someone to go through the company's policy book looking for the dumbest, most counter-productive rules, and then they would insist on following them. Until management gave in.
Admin
A couple of years ago I refinanced my house, and of course I had to sign this huge stack of papers. The loan officer was surprised that I actually read all the papers before signing them. She said most people just buzz through and sign them all. Like, wow. The biggest contract most people will ever sign in their lives, involving hundreds of thousands of dollars, and they'll sign it without even reading it?
Admin
Amen brother!
I explicitly only allow the servers I'm responsible for to auto update Monday through Wednesday, that way I have Thursday to clean up any mess and hopefully still be able to leave on time Friday....
So far I have been able to awoid fan + excrement on a Thursday, but you never know. ducks and looks for the sandbag falling
Yours Yazeran
Plan: To go to Mars one day with a hammer
Admin
Work-to-rule or "restrictive practices." See it here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_RUYn8adavM
Admin
this.
the guys who did that should have been taken out back and beaten with a keyboard.
Admin
Admin
At the large multi-national company that I used to work for, we had a piece of software that was installed on every corporate PC we owned. Not only was it used to push patches, but also software upgrades.
One weekend, the architect made a few changes and tested them locally. Of course, no documentation - that could wait!
He promptly went on a 2 week vacation in the wilderness - no phone, no cell phone, no CB radio - NOTHING! We had PCs dropping like flies the next Monday.
Fortunately, one of the other senior programmers was able to figure out what he had done and backed it out. We only lost about half the day.
We were waiting for the show when he got back - absolutely nothing happened! Not even a "Sorry about that" email.
He must have had some REALLY GOOD compromising pictures of someone!!
Admin
There is no law requiring this sort of banner. This is born out of idiocy and concentrating primarily on satisfying the audit without thinking about what the purpose of the audit is. The audit becomes the end to quality, not the means.
Having a screen that people have to click on is fairly standard in America, not because of any law or because it makes sense but because it produces an artifact you can put into an audit to prove that yes, absolutely you told the employee that. It really has no more value than that, and honestly, they totally could've (and should've) fired the CFO for what was going on. Policies are totally enforceable without this kind of crap. It's just you can't pass your security audit without being able to prove you've done something to inform the users.
Admin
Of course they could and should have fired him anyway; and had he been any other worker, they most certainly would have. But he's CFO, so instead they made the real workers waste a few hours and nearly halt production for the entire weekend in order to protect his reputation.
Admin
TRWTF is that the solution should have been to update the standard warning message to contain this sentence at the end:
Admin
Search the source code of this page for
click me
it's an interesting script!
Admin
Al should have left it and let them stew in their own juices and explain that the idiotic CTO told them he couldn't change anything. How do these morons get these jobs?