Discussion:
[BBC] IBM workers banned from using USB sticks
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Mr. Man-wai Chang
2018-05-12 17:11:10 UTC
Permalink
[BBC] IBM workers banned from using USB sticks
Full story: <http://www.bbc.com/news/technology-44069488>

Staff at IBM have been banned from using removable memory devices such
as USB sticks, SD cards and flash drives.

The possibility of "financial and reputational" damage if staff lost or
misused the devices prompted the decision, reported The Register.

Instead, IBM staff who need to move data around will be encouraged to do
so via an internal network.

The decree banning removable storage acknowledges that complying with it
could be "disruptive".

Losing data

.... more ....
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Frank Slootweg
2018-05-12 17:55:00 UTC
Permalink
Post by Mr. Man-wai Chang
[BBC] IBM workers banned from using USB sticks
Full story: <http://www.bbc.com/news/technology-44069488>
Staff at IBM have been banned from using removable memory devices such
as USB sticks, SD cards and flash drives.
The possibility of "financial and reputational" damage if staff lost or
misused the devices prompted the decision, reported The Register.
Instead, IBM staff who need to move data around will be encouraged to do
so via an internal network.
The decree banning removable storage acknowledges that complying with it
could be "disruptive".
Losing data
.... more ....
Hmmm! I thought this was the twenty-first century, not the twentieth!?

But heh, better late than never!
J. P. Gilliver (John)
2018-05-12 22:36:16 UTC
Permalink
Post by Mr. Man-wai Chang
[BBC] IBM workers banned from using USB sticks
Full story: <http://www.bbc.com/news/technology-44069488>
Staff at IBM have been banned from using removable memory devices such
as USB sticks, SD cards and flash drives.
The possibility of "financial and reputational" damage if staff lost or
misused the devices prompted the decision, reported The Register.
Instead, IBM staff who need to move data around will be encouraged to
do so via an internal network.
The decree banning removable storage acknowledges that complying with
it could be "disruptive".
Losing data
.... more ....
The company I worked for banned them many years ago - for reasons of (a)
concern of theft of secure [either in the government (it was a defence
contractor) or commercial sense] material, and (b) fear of infection.
--
J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/<1985 MB++G()AL-IS-Ch++(p)***@T+H+Sh0!:`)DNAf

Some cause happiness wherever they go; others, whenever they go. - Oscar Wilde
Frank Slootweg
2018-05-13 10:38:06 UTC
Permalink
Post by J. P. Gilliver (John)
Post by Mr. Man-wai Chang
[BBC] IBM workers banned from using USB sticks
Full story: <http://www.bbc.com/news/technology-44069488>
Staff at IBM have been banned from using removable memory devices such
as USB sticks, SD cards and flash drives.
The possibility of "financial and reputational" damage if staff lost or
misused the devices prompted the decision, reported The Register.
Instead, IBM staff who need to move data around will be encouraged to
do so via an internal network.
The decree banning removable storage acknowledges that complying with
it could be "disruptive".
Losing data
.... more ....
The company I worked for banned them many years ago - for reasons of (a)
concern of theft of secure [either in the government (it was a defence
contractor) or commercial sense] material, and (b) fear of infection.
Exactly. Same with the little 150K employee computer company I worked
for. As soon as USB ports showed up on computers, they were made
inoperable. (No card-readers at that time.) That was well before the
year 2000.
Tim
2018-05-13 13:42:05 UTC
Permalink
Post by Frank Slootweg
Post by J. P. Gilliver (John)
Post by Mr. Man-wai Chang
[BBC] IBM workers banned from using USB sticks
Full story: <http://www.bbc.com/news/technology-44069488>
Staff at IBM have been banned from using removable memory devices
such as USB sticks, SD cards and flash drives.
The possibility of "financial and reputational" damage if staff lost
or misused the devices prompted the decision, reported The Register.
Instead, IBM staff who need to move data around will be encouraged
to do so via an internal network.
The decree banning removable storage acknowledges that complying
with it could be "disruptive".
Losing data
.... more ....
The company I worked for banned them many years ago - for reasons of
(a) concern of theft of secure [either in the government (it was a
defence contractor) or commercial sense] material, and (b) fear of
infection.
Exactly. Same with the little 150K employee computer company I worked
for. As soon as USB ports showed up on computers, they were made
inoperable. (No card-readers at that time.) That was well before the
year 2000.
Many years ago I used to service some data equipment at a defense
contractor site. I was required to leave my calculator at the security
check-in desk for the same reason. This was long before USB ever came
into existence. And of course, there is the most popular story floating
around about the banning of Furbies, due to their small memory function.
Data loss concerns have been around for a long, long time.
nospam
2018-05-13 14:47:14 UTC
Permalink
Post by Frank Slootweg
Post by J. P. Gilliver (John)
The company I worked for banned them many years ago - for reasons of (a)
concern of theft of secure [either in the government (it was a defence
contractor) or commercial sense] material, and (b) fear of infection.
Exactly. Same with the little 150K employee computer company I worked
for. As soon as USB ports showed up on computers, they were made
inoperable. (No card-readers at that time.) That was well before the
year 2000.
there weren't very many usb peripherals 'well before the year 2000' so
disabling the usb ports didn't make much of a difference.

meanwhile, ethernet ports remained active...
Paul
2018-05-13 17:45:14 UTC
Permalink
Post by nospam
Post by Frank Slootweg
Post by J. P. Gilliver (John)
The company I worked for banned them many years ago - for reasons of (a)
concern of theft of secure [either in the government (it was a defence
contractor) or commercial sense] material, and (b) fear of infection.
Exactly. Same with the little 150K employee computer company I worked
for. As soon as USB ports showed up on computers, they were made
inoperable. (No card-readers at that time.) That was well before the
year 2000.
there weren't very many usb peripherals 'well before the year 2000' so
disabling the usb ports didn't make much of a difference.
meanwhile, ethernet ports remained active...
You know that Ethernet ports can be blocked, right ?

A manager at work learned this the hard way. The IT department
would only schedule a workstation move, for a date a few weeks
into the future. The newly minted manager said "come on, you lads,
and help me move this computer" (the gentleman was an "I don't
take No for an answer" type).

The routers were set up with MAC filtering, so "strange" Ethernet
devices would be ignored. And sure enough, upon connecting the
machine and booting... "no network" was the result.

So sure, it may look like an Ethernet port, but you'd better
have good knowledge of what MAC address to appropriate before
that connection is going to work. That's why they buy equipment
with features like that, just to make a damn nuisance of
themselves with it :-) We all had a good chuckle about
the "test results", and had to drive all the equipment back
up the hall again afterwards.

If a party doing industrial espionage had an insider who
could collect MAC addresses, they could probably manage
to bypass that feature. It's not like the method is
"Fort Knox" or anything. But at the time, it was pretty funny
that a legit employee move could be blocked that way.

Paul
nospam
2018-05-13 18:24:51 UTC
Permalink
Post by Paul
Post by nospam
Post by Frank Slootweg
Post by J. P. Gilliver (John)
The company I worked for banned them many years ago - for reasons of (a)
concern of theft of secure [either in the government (it was a defence
contractor) or commercial sense] material, and (b) fear of infection.
Exactly. Same with the little 150K employee computer company I worked
for. As soon as USB ports showed up on computers, they were made
inoperable. (No card-readers at that time.) That was well before the
year 2000.
there weren't very many usb peripherals 'well before the year 2000' so
disabling the usb ports didn't make much of a difference.
meanwhile, ethernet ports remained active...
You know that Ethernet ports can be blocked, right ?
of course, except that would make the computer rather useless.

the point is that blocking usb ports, especially at a time when there
weren't very many usb devices available (as in almost nothing, it was
usb 1.0 days), while leaving everything else wide open, is completely
pointless.
Post by Paul
A manager at work learned this the hard way. The IT department
would only schedule a workstation move, for a date a few weeks
into the future. The newly minted manager said "come on, you lads,
and help me move this computer" (the gentleman was an "I don't
take No for an answer" type).
The routers were set up with MAC filtering, so "strange" Ethernet
devices would be ignored. And sure enough, upon connecting the
machine and booting... "no network" was the result.
finding a valid mac address and spoofing it is incredibly trivial.

mac address filtering is a very big clue that the sysadmins do not
understand anything about network security.
Frank Slootweg
2018-05-13 20:10:35 UTC
Permalink
Post by nospam
Post by Frank Slootweg
Post by J. P. Gilliver (John)
The company I worked for banned them many years ago - for reasons of (a)
concern of theft of secure [either in the government (it was a defence
contractor) or commercial sense] material, and (b) fear of infection.
Exactly. Same with the little 150K employee computer company I worked
for. As soon as USB ports showed up on computers, they were made
inoperable. (No card-readers at that time.) That was well before the
year 2000.
there weren't very many usb peripherals 'well before the year 2000' so
disabling the usb ports didn't make much of a difference.
Huh? The discussion is about USB (memory) sticks!
Post by nospam
meanwhile, ethernet ports remained active...
Duh! Yes, they were quite handy to connect to our *intra*net, thank
you very much! And yes, our Internet gateways were very secure/strict,
TYVM. (Think NET-15 (and -16.)
nospam
2018-05-13 21:21:39 UTC
Permalink
Post by Frank Slootweg
Post by nospam
Post by Frank Slootweg
Post by J. P. Gilliver (John)
The company I worked for banned them many years ago - for reasons of
(a) concern of theft of secure [either in the government (it was a defence
contractor) or commercial sense] material, and (b) fear of infection.
Exactly. Same with the little 150K employee computer company I worked
for. As soon as USB ports showed up on computers, they were made
inoperable. (No card-readers at that time.) That was well before the
year 2000.
there weren't very many usb peripherals 'well before the year 2000' so
disabling the usb ports didn't make much of a difference.
Huh? The discussion is about USB (memory) sticks!
which didn't exist 'well before the year 2000'.

usb 1.1 was finalized in late 1998 and started to become popular in
1999 as manufacturers ramped up.

usb 1.0 and win95 'support' did exist before that, but it was more of a
technology demo than actual products.

according to wikipedia, the first usb memory stick was available in
mid-december, 2000, so really 2001 when people could buy them.

<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USB_flash_drive#History>
USB flash drives were invented at M-Systems, an Israeli company, in a
US patent filed in April 5, 1999 by Amir Ban, Dov Moran and Oron
Ogdan, all M-Systems employees at the time. The product was
announced by the company in September 2000, and was first sold by
IBM in 8MB capacity starting December 15, 2000.
Post by Frank Slootweg
Post by nospam
meanwhile, ethernet ports remained active...
Duh! Yes, they were quite handy to connect to our *intra*net, thank
you very much! And yes, our Internet gateways were very secure/strict,
TYVM. (Think NET-15 (and -16.)
connect a rogue device to the intranet. done. spoof mac address (easy)
and it will go unnoticed by the admins.

if data theft and malware infection was truly a concern, they'd need to
disable floppy drives and pcmcia slots. did they?

disabling usb was nothing more than fear of the unknown.
Frank Slootweg
2018-05-14 15:28:17 UTC
Permalink
Post by nospam
Post by Frank Slootweg
Post by nospam
Post by Frank Slootweg
Post by J. P. Gilliver (John)
The company I worked for banned them many years ago - for
reasons of (a) concern of theft of secure [either in the
government (it was a defence contractor) or commercial sense]
material, and (b) fear of infection.
Exactly. Same with the little 150K employee computer company I worked
for. As soon as USB ports showed up on computers, they were made
inoperable. (No card-readers at that time.) That was well before the
year 2000.
there weren't very many usb peripherals 'well before the year 2000' so
disabling the usb ports didn't make much of a difference.
Huh? The discussion is about USB (memory) sticks!
which didn't exist 'well before the year 2000'.
Correct. I thought it was earlier, but according to my notes, it was
probably mid-2001.
Post by nospam
usb 1.1 was finalized in late 1998 and started to become popular in
1999 as manufacturers ramped up.
usb 1.0 and win95 'support' did exist before that, but it was more of a
technology demo than actual products.
We used Windows 2000 (and NT before that).
Post by nospam
according to wikipedia, the first usb memory stick was available in
mid-december, 2000, so really 2001 when people could buy them.
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USB_flash_drive#History>
USB flash drives were invented at M-Systems, an Israeli company, in a
US patent filed in April 5, 1999 by Amir Ban, Dov Moran and Oron
Ogdan, all M-Systems employees at the time. The product was
announced by the company in September 2000, and was first sold by
IBM in 8MB capacity starting December 15, 2000.
Post by Frank Slootweg
Post by nospam
meanwhile, ethernet ports remained active...
Duh! Yes, they were quite handy to connect to our *intra*net, thank
you very much! And yes, our Internet gateways were very secure/strict,
TYVM. (Think NET-15 (and -16.)
connect a rogue device to the intranet. done. spoof mac address (easy)
and it will go unnoticed by the admins.
Unlikely that someone trying to make a physical connection would get
unnoticed, i.e. they would have to disconnect an existing device. And
they would have to set a correct/non-clashing computer name. Not
impossible, but unlikely. And what could they do, other than infect
their own computer? No way they could get to any company data without
knowing logins/passwords, etc.. (IIRC, they also would need the client
software in order to be able to *get* a login, but I'm not absolutely
sure about that.)
Post by nospam
if data theft and malware infection was truly a concern, they'd need to
disable floppy drives and pcmcia slots. did they?
Yes. The whole environment was locked down and all software
installation/updating was managed by the IT department. I.e. one could
only install/update software which was provide/blessed by the IT
department.

We actually sold our management software/services to our customers,
i.e. if it serves us, it would most likely suit them as well.
Post by nospam
disabling usb was nothing more than fear of the unknown.
I wouldn't call it 'fear', but a justified precaution, *because* the
dangers were unkown.

Bottom line: Trust me, you can leave it up to a 150K employee computer
company to really lock down their own IT.
nospam
2018-05-14 17:04:31 UTC
Permalink
Post by Frank Slootweg
Post by nospam
Post by Frank Slootweg
Post by nospam
Post by Frank Slootweg
Post by J. P. Gilliver (John)
The company I worked for banned them many years ago - for
reasons of (a) concern of theft of secure [either in the
government (it was a defence contractor) or commercial sense]
material, and (b) fear of infection.
Exactly. Same with the little 150K employee computer company I worked
for. As soon as USB ports showed up on computers, they were made
inoperable. (No card-readers at that time.) That was well before the
year 2000.
there weren't very many usb peripherals 'well before the year 2000' so
disabling the usb ports didn't make much of a difference.
Huh? The discussion is about USB (memory) sticks!
which didn't exist 'well before the year 2000'.
Correct. I thought it was earlier, but according to my notes, it was
probably mid-2001.
that time frame makes a bit more sense.
Jason
2018-05-13 03:20:15 UTC
Permalink
Post by Mr. Man-wai Chang
Staff at IBM have been banned from using removable memory devices such
as USB sticks, SD cards and flash drives.
I recall a few years ago reading that the Pentagon had
such a policy in place and had filled USB sockets with
epoxy to enforce it.
Libor Striz
2018-05-13 14:41:32 UTC
Permalink
Post by Jason
I recall a few years ago reading that the Pentagon had
such a policy in place and had filled USB sockets with
epoxy to enforce it.
Quite a disadvantage if one is using a USB mouse or keyboard.
--
Libor Striz aka Poutnik ( a pilgrim/wanderer/wayfarer)

"Humour is the only effective weapon against stupidity."
Miloš Forman


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Frank Slootweg
2018-05-13 20:10:36 UTC
Permalink
Post by Libor Striz
Post by Jason
I recall a few years ago reading that the Pentagon had
such a policy in place and had filled USB sockets with
epoxy to enforce it.
Quite a disadvantage if one is using a USB mouse or keyboard.
That's why <insert_diety> invented PS/2!
Diesel
2018-05-13 22:40:43 UTC
Permalink
Frank Slootweg <***@ddress.is.invalid> news:***@ID-
201911.user.individual.net Sun, 13 May 2018 20:10:36 GMT in
Post by Frank Slootweg
Post by Libor Striz
Post by Jason
I recall a few years ago reading that the Pentagon had
such a policy in place and had filled USB sockets with
epoxy to enforce it.
Quite a disadvantage if one is using a USB mouse or keyboard.
That's why <insert_diety> invented PS/2!
Have you seen a recent motherboard that has it?
--
To prevent yourself from being a victim of cyber
stalking, it's highly recommended you visit here:
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===================================================
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Andy Burns
2018-05-13 23:04:03 UTC
Permalink
Post by Diesel
Post by Frank Slootweg
That's why <insert_diety> invented PS/2!
Have you seen a recent motherboard that has it?
recent enough?

<https://www.asrock.com/mb/Intel/Z370%20Pro4/index.us.asp>
Diesel
2018-05-14 01:28:58 UTC
Permalink
Post by Andy Burns
Post by Diesel
Post by Frank Slootweg
That's why <insert_diety> invented PS/2!
Have you seen a recent motherboard that has it?
recent enough?
<https://www.asrock.com/mb/Intel/Z370%20Pro4/index.us.asp>
Ayep. You'll notice it has a single ps/2 port available. For mouse or
keyboard, not both. Short of using one of those adapters that may/may
not work. Instead of the previous standard of two. One for each...ps/2
is on it's way out, in favor of USB. It has been for quite sometime.
Give it a few more years, boards won't even include the single port
anymore, of those that still do.
--
To prevent yourself from being a victim of cyber
stalking, it's highly recommended you visit here:
https://tekrider.net/pages/david-brooks-stalker.php
===================================================
SYSTEM ERROR 10-100: Operator has to go to the bathroom.
Andy Burns
2018-05-14 15:36:14 UTC
Permalink
Post by Diesel
Post by Andy Burns
<https://www.asrock.com/mb/Intel/Z370%20Pro4/index.us.asp>
Ayep. You'll notice it has a single ps/2 port available. For mouse or
keyboard, not both.
Don't quote me, but I think those PS/2 ports that are half green/half
purple can cope with a 'Y' splitter
Char Jackson
2018-05-14 16:54:18 UTC
Permalink
Post by Andy Burns
Post by Diesel
Post by Andy Burns
<https://www.asrock.com/mb/Intel/Z370%20Pro4/index.us.asp>
Ayep. You'll notice it has a single ps/2 port available. For mouse or
keyboard, not both.
Don't quote me, but I think those PS/2 ports that are half green/half
purple can cope with a 'Y' splitter
I have two systems here that are working fine with PS/2 splitters, but I
can't speak for more than that.
Paul
2018-05-14 17:04:01 UTC
Permalink
Post by Andy Burns
Post by Diesel
Post by Andy Burns
<https://www.asrock.com/mb/Intel/Z370%20Pro4/index.us.asp>
Ayep. You'll notice it has a single ps/2 port available. For mouse or
keyboard, not both.
Don't quote me, but I think those PS/2 ports that are half green/half
purple can cope with a 'Y' splitter
There are sufficient pins on the miniDIN to host two
PS/2 electrical interfaces. Clock,Data for one, plus
Clock,Data for a second interface. The remaining pins
are power,ground.

Once a PS/2 is spotted on the motherboard, it means
there is a SuperI/O chip on the motherboard, and it's
just as easy to support one PS/2 as two PS/2. SuperI/O
exist in various stripped-down forms, but I don't think
there's much incentive to strip off the second clock,data
pair. The chip might typically be present so there
can be a working Hardware Monitor interface.

And to me, PS/2 is one of the most trouble-free interfaces
in terms of drivers. Never seems to be a problem.

Paul
Diesel
2018-05-15 20:43:54 UTC
Permalink
Post by Paul
And to me, PS/2 is one of the most trouble-free interfaces
in terms of drivers. Never seems to be a problem.
I've always liked ps/2 myself, but, it's on the way out in favor of USB
and has been for quite sometime. It's not uncommon to find brand new
machines that don't have a single ps/2 port, but, a decent amount of
usb ports instead.
--
To prevent yourself from being a victim of cyber
stalking, it's highly recommended you visit here:
https://tekrider.net/pages/david-brooks-stalker.php
===================================================
One day I shall burst my bud of calm and blossom forth into hysteria.
Diesel
2018-05-15 20:43:53 UTC
Permalink
Post by Andy Burns
Post by Diesel
Post by Andy Burns
<https://www.asrock.com/mb/Intel/Z370%20Pro4/index.us.asp>
Ayep. You'll notice it has a single ps/2 port available. For
mouse or keyboard, not both.
Don't quote me, but I think those PS/2 ports that are half
green/half purple can cope with a 'Y' splitter
Indeed. As the rest of my post mentioned:

Ayep. You'll notice it has a single ps/2 port available. For mouse or
keyboard, not both. Short of using one of those adapters that may/may
not work. Instead of the previous standard of two. One for each...ps/2
is on it's way out, in favor of USB. It has been for quite sometime.
Give it a few more years, boards won't even include the single port
anymore, of those that still do.
--
To prevent yourself from being a victim of cyber
stalking, it's highly recommended you visit here:
https://tekrider.net/pages/david-brooks-stalker.php
===================================================
Confucius say: Those who quote me are fools.
Frank Slootweg
2018-05-14 15:28:18 UTC
Permalink
Post by Diesel
201911.user.individual.net Sun, 13 May 2018 20:10:36 GMT in
Post by Frank Slootweg
Post by Libor Striz
Post by Jason
I recall a few years ago reading that the Pentagon had
such a policy in place and had filled USB sockets with
epoxy to enforce it.
Quite a disadvantage if one is using a USB mouse or keyboard.
That's why <insert_diety> invented PS/2!
Have you seen a recent motherboard that has it?
It was/is 1) tongue-in-cheek, 2) in the given historical (hysterical?)
context, 3) about IBM internal use (i.e. their MBs would have what they
want/need) and 4) irrelevant for locked-down internal systems. And Andy
Burns answered your question.
Eric Stevens
2018-05-14 22:56:06 UTC
Permalink
Post by Diesel
201911.user.individual.net Sun, 13 May 2018 20:10:36 GMT in
Post by Frank Slootweg
Post by Libor Striz
Post by Jason
I recall a few years ago reading that the Pentagon had
such a policy in place and had filled USB sockets with
epoxy to enforce it.
Quite a disadvantage if one is using a USB mouse or keyboard.
That's why <insert_diety> invented PS/2!
Have you seen a recent motherboard that has it?
The ASUS X99-AII has a twinned P/S2 socket
--
Regards,

Eric Stevens
Diesel
2018-05-15 20:43:55 UTC
Permalink
Post by Eric Stevens
Post by Diesel
201911.user.individual.net Sun, 13 May 2018 20:10:36 GMT in
Post by Frank Slootweg
Post by Libor Striz
Post by Jason
I recall a few years ago reading that the Pentagon had
such a policy in place and had filled USB sockets with
epoxy to enforce it.
Quite a disadvantage if one is using a USB mouse or keyboard.
That's why <insert_diety> invented PS/2!
Have you seen a recent motherboard that has it?
The ASUS X99-AII has a twinned P/S2 socket
Fair enough. :)
--
To prevent yourself from being a victim of cyber
stalking, it's highly recommended you visit here:
https://tekrider.net/pages/david-brooks-stalker.php
===================================================
How do shepherds practice safe sex?
They paint an X on the back of the ones that kick!
Libor Striz
2018-05-13 05:05:06 UTC
Permalink
Post by Mr. Man-wai Chang
[BBC] IBM workers banned from using USB sticks
It is a logical decision.
I do not see it as a topic.
--
Libor Striz aka Poutnik ( a pilgrim/wanderer/wayfarer)

"Humour is the only effective weapon against stupidity."
Miloš Forman


----Android NewsGroup Reader----
http://usenet.sinaapp.com/
mechanic
2018-05-13 10:42:40 UTC
Permalink
Post by Libor Striz
Post by Mr. Man-wai Chang
[BBC] IBM workers banned from using USB sticks
It is a logical decision.
I do not see it as a topic.
Welcome to UseNet mate.
Libor Striz
2018-05-13 12:35:03 UTC
Permalink
Post by mechanic
Post by Libor Striz
Post by Mr. Man-wai Chang
[BBC] IBM workers banned from using USB sticks
It is a logical decision.
I do not see it as a topic.
Welcome to UseNet mate.
Being here for more then 20 years, mate.
--
Libor Striz aka Poutnik ( a pilgrim/wanderer/wayfarer)

"Humour is the only effective weapon against stupidity."
Miloš Forman


----Android NewsGroup Reader----
http://usenet.sinaapp.com/
Ant
2018-05-13 19:29:12 UTC
Permalink
In alt.comp.hardware.pc-homebuilt Libor Striz <***@capitalsgmail.com> wrote:
...
Post by Libor Striz
Post by mechanic
Welcome to UseNet mate.
Being here for more then 20 years, mate.
Usenet forever. ;)
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:) Ma's Day esp. queen ants!
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Frank Slootweg
2018-05-13 20:15:30 UTC
Permalink
Post by Libor Striz
Post by mechanic
Post by Libor Striz
Post by Mr. Man-wai Chang
[BBC] IBM workers banned from using USB sticks
It is a logical decision.
I do not see it as a topic.
Welcome to UseNet mate.
Being here for more then 20 years, mate.
No worries, mate. Newbies are welcome!
Ant
2018-05-14 01:41:28 UTC
Permalink
Post by Frank Slootweg
Post by Libor Striz
Post by mechanic
Post by Libor Striz
Post by Mr. Man-wai Chang
[BBC] IBM workers banned from using USB sticks
It is a logical decision.
I do not see it as a topic.
Welcome to UseNet mate.
Being here for more then 20 years, mate.
No worries, mate. Newbies are welcome!
Ditto. :)
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Stephen
2018-05-13 19:14:01 UTC
Permalink
On Sun, 13 May 2018 01:11:10 +0800, "Mr. Man-wai Chang"
Post by Mr. Man-wai Chang
[BBC] IBM workers banned from using USB sticks
Full story: <http://www.bbc.com/news/technology-44069488>
Staff at IBM have been banned from using removable memory devices such
as USB sticks, SD cards and flash drives.
The possibility of "financial and reputational" damage if staff lost or
misused the devices prompted the decision, reported The Register.
Instead, IBM staff who need to move data around will be encouraged to do
so via an internal network.
The decree banning removable storage acknowledges that complying with it
could be "disruptive".
Losing data
.... more ....
IBM engineers are going to have fun when some of their systems use USB
flash drives for diagnostics......

anyhow there are rumours that there was an attacvk of common sense and
exceptions
https://www.theregister.co.uk/2018/05/10/ibm_bans_all_removable_storage_for_all_staff_everywhere/
--
Stephen
Libor Striz
2018-05-14 04:26:40 UTC
Permalink
Post by Mr. Man-wai Chang
[BBC] IBM workers banned from using USB sticks
Full story: <http://www.bbc.com/news/technology-44069488>
Staff at IBM have been banned from using removable memory devices such
as USB sticks, SD cards and flash drives.
In fact, USB based storages were banned in IBM multiple years ago,
unless authorized, e.g. USB stick based audit software, or
company HW/OS service department.

This time, it just gets to be more strictly controlled and
eventually software countermeasures may to be applied.
--
Libor Striz aka Poutnik ( a pilgrim/wanderer/wayfarer)

"Humour is the only effective weapon against stupidity."
Miloš Forman


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