A-AvantGarde
MB Enthusiast
- Joined
- Nov 11, 2003
- Messages
- 4,693
- Location
- South Bucks
- Car
- 2023 Mercedes EQC400, 2015 Porsche 911 Turbo S, 2019 BMW X5 40i
I'm trying to drag my company into the 21st Century and allow some of our users to connect to their home wireless connections and possible use wireless hotspots etc. This could be upto 750 laptop users.
Does anyone work for a reasonably large company that allows them to do this, what restrictions (if any) to they place on you.
My thoughts, we don't supply home broadband connections nor do we intend to. We intend to offer this as a service 'as is' i.e. our IT Service desk wouldn't technically support home wireless setups. We would offer a user guide and some security advice and guidance on recommended broadband providers / routers and security to use etc. I know there was some publicity on the press & watchdog about spoofing HotSpots etc just want to understand whether people handle this via education (e.g. in the way you would educate people to watch out for Social Engineering type attacks) or if they handle it with additional security measures or indeed do what we currently do and don't allow it at all!
I've also come across some software which makes managing connections simpler, such as iPass and Vodafone Secure Remote Access.
If it makes any difference, we use a Cisco VPN with two factor authentication, although not all laptop users have this (although they can't VPN without this).
Keen to hear how others deal with this...
Does anyone work for a reasonably large company that allows them to do this, what restrictions (if any) to they place on you.
My thoughts, we don't supply home broadband connections nor do we intend to. We intend to offer this as a service 'as is' i.e. our IT Service desk wouldn't technically support home wireless setups. We would offer a user guide and some security advice and guidance on recommended broadband providers / routers and security to use etc. I know there was some publicity on the press & watchdog about spoofing HotSpots etc just want to understand whether people handle this via education (e.g. in the way you would educate people to watch out for Social Engineering type attacks) or if they handle it with additional security measures or indeed do what we currently do and don't allow it at all!
I've also come across some software which makes managing connections simpler, such as iPass and Vodafone Secure Remote Access.
If it makes any difference, we use a Cisco VPN with two factor authentication, although not all laptop users have this (although they can't VPN without this).
Keen to hear how others deal with this...