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Welcome to Vista Forums we are your forum to discuss Windows Vista x64 and x86 systems. Whether you need help or just want to post an idea you have on Vista, this is the forum for you.
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| Guest | How will corporate permissions affect my Vista Ultimate at home? I have VPN access so I can connect with our corporate network from home. Problem is that there is no ability to connect my computer to a domain in Windows Vista Home Premium (or XP Home Edition). I am thinking of upgrading to Vista Ultimate, but they have tightened many permissions at work to block us from installing any software or getting into 'system' areas, and I was wondering what effect that would have on MY computer if I did log onto the corporate server from home? Would my computer at home then inherit all the restrictions that are in place on my desktop computer at work? I wouldn't want that, and would really make me mad if I spent the $$ for an upgrade & got locked out of my own PC! --Mike Hall |
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| Guest | Re: How will corporate permissions affect my Vista Ultimate at home? Mike Hall wrote:
It would depend entirely upon how your employer's network administrator has configured the domain, its group policies, and their requirements for accessing the domain via VPN. In theory, your computer could be pretty thoroughly controlled from the domain. You need to direct this question to your employer's IT department. No one else can provide a definitive answer. While I understand your concerns about control of your personal computer, no network administrator worth his salary would allow a privately owned computer to access the network for whose security he's responsible without placing some pretty heavy safeguards in place and having nearly total control of that computer. If your employer wants you to work from home, the company should provide you a computer for that purpose. -- Bruce Chambers Help us help you: http://dts-l.org/goodpost.htm http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety. -Benjamin Franklin Many people would rather die than think; in fact, most do. -Bertrand Russell | ||||||||||||
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| Guest | Re: How will corporate permissions affect my Vista Ultimate at hom The work-from-home is my idea, and I will get 1 chance to ask IT for some sort of access, so I want to have my ducks in a row before I ask. I have had VPN access for years, but since WinXP, I have logged onto our network via VPN, then used RealVNC to 'remote control' my workstation at the office which had a VNC server running on it. (Not approved by IT & recently removed. IT used to use VNC to remote all of our workstations) My question is, from a security standpoint, which of the following is my best bet for getting IT to approve me having remote access again: 1) Reinstalling VNC on my workstation & 'remote controlling' it from home via VPN. 1a) Using PC Anywhere to connect (any advantage here over using VNC?) 2) Logging onto a Terminal Server that is able to access the corp domain via VPN. 3) Upgrading my home PC to Vista Ultimate & connecting direct to corp domain via VPN. (I do have a spare PC I could dedicate to work if necessary) 4) Any other ideas that you think would be more secure & likely to be approved? I realize you can't answer for our IT guys, but if YOU were the IT guy, what method would you approve? --Mike Hall "Bruce Chambers" wrote:
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| Guest | Re: How will corporate permissions affect my Vista Ultimate at hom =?Utf-8?B?TWlrZSBIYWxs?= <MikeHall@xxxxxx> wrote in news:021F3645-AF87-441E-AC78-F1E02B728B28@xxxxxx:
If I was your network administrator, I would provide equipment locked down per company policies and allow you to VPN in with that device. I would not allow you to VPN directly from your home PC as I have no control over your PC. I've seen other implementations: published applications via HTTPS. Citrix has remote solutions. Perhaps you can be setup to VPN in to a secured part of the network and then allowed to remote desktop to a server within that secured network. They could setup the applications you need to use and then use the remote desktop session as a security boundary. Are you unique? Are there any other employees that have VPN access? How does IT handle them? Adam -- Visit my PC Tech blog at www.leinss.com/blog | ||||||||||||
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| Guest | Re: How will corporate permissions affect my Vista Ultimate at hom "Adam Leinss" wrote: ...
company. Now that you ask, they all have company issued laptops now (it didn't used to be the case. We could dial up/VPN and log on from any PC). I thought about asking them to post the report that I need on the secure intranet that I have access to, but they would need to design it likely just for 2 or 3 people to use. Not likely to happen. I had authorized VPN access about 5 years ago, by connecting to a Terminal Server session (is that called Remote Desktop now?). After awhile I noticed that as upgrades were done to our business software program, they were not being upgraded on the Terminal Server. It became clear that the server was forgotten about, and that I must be the only one still using it. Then it disappeared completely one day. I have since stepped down to a non-management position, & my remote access should have been revoked at that time. It was not, so I continued to enjoy the convenience of logging on from home until technology started changing and I no longer was in the loop for upgrades, etc. I discovered that they used VNC to remote connect to my workstation, and tried that over VPN from home one day & it worked, to my suprise. I had access again via my desktop at work! I've been using it that way ever since, even though IS stopped using VNC a couple years ago. Typically, our IT guys were hired from other depts within the company to work in IS. Then they were replaced by people with MCSE certificates and the like, and the result is that we are now locked down pretty tight. I always wondered why I could get into the registry editor and other system areas of my computer, and get into some other peoples files on the server. Now I cannot do any of that. I think my best bet now is to keep quiet before I lose what little is left of my remote access. Thanks for the input, guys. --Mike Hall | ||||||||||||
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