RE: [ActiveDir] OT: Active Directory Browser History Files

2004-07-16 Thread Peter Johnson








We are very impressed with the MailMarshal
solution weve deployed. 











From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Fuller, Stuart
Sent: 15 July 2004 17:06
To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] OT:
Active Directory Browser History Files





You can look at the users
Local Settings\History or Local Settings\Temporary Internet
Files. However these two folders may not be replicating with your
roaming profiles from the local workstations. That depends on how you
have the roaming profile settings configured.



Have you thought about
something likeSurfControl (http://www.surfcontrol.com/)?
This may be a better/easier/more flexible solution than parsing through
everyone's roaming or local profiles. It will alsocatch those users
that are smart enough to delete both the IE history and the temp files. 



-Stuart Fuller









From:
Edwin [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Thursday, July 15, 2004 8:44
AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [ActiveDir] OT: Active
Directory Browser History Files

In our domain we use roaming profiles. What I
would like to know is if there is an easy way to monitor the web sites that end
users are looking at while at their workstations. We have users that are
going to site that may offend others and this needs to be addressed.



I am aware of reviewing the Firewall logs but I was
hoping that there would be an easier way since all the machines are connected
to the domain.



Thank you all for your replies.



Edwin 








RE: [ActiveDir] OT: Active Directory Browser History Files

2004-07-16 Thread Steve Rochford



Are you using a proxy server? If so then configure it to log to a SQL 
database and query that. Both ISA server and MS Proxy server can easily be 
configured to do this and you can then generate reports of use by user, size of 
download, time of download etc.

You may generate a lot of data - our ISA logs are roughly 2Gb per 
day...

Steve


From: Edwin [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: 15 July 2004 15:44To: 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]Subject: [ActiveDir] OT: Active Directory 
Browser History Files


In our domain we use roaming 
profiles. What I would like to know is if there is an easy way to monitor 
the web sites that end users are looking at while at their workstations. 
We have users that are going to site that may offend others and this needs to be 
addressed.

I am aware of reviewing the Firewall 
logs but I was hoping that there would be an easier way since all the machines 
are connected to the domain.

Thank you all for your 
replies.

Edwin 



RE: [ActiveDir] OT: Active Directory Browser History Files

2004-07-15 Thread Fuller, Stuart



You can look at the users "Local Settings\History" or 
"Local Settings\Temporary Internet Files". However these two folders may 
not be replicating with your roaming profiles from the local workstations. 
That depends on how you have the roaming profile settings 
configured.

Have you thought about something 
likeSurfControl (http://www.surfcontrol.com/)? This 
may be a better/easier/more flexible solution than parsing through everyone's 
roaming or local profiles. It will alsocatch those users that are 
smart enough to delete both the IE history and the temp files. 


-Stuart Fuller


From: Edwin [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Thursday, July 15, 2004 8:44 AMTo: 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]Subject: [ActiveDir] OT: Active Directory 
Browser History Files


In our domain we use roaming 
profiles. What I would like to know is if there is an easy way to monitor 
the web sites that end users are looking at while at their workstations. 
We have users that are going to site that may offend others and this needs to be 
addressed.

I am aware of reviewing the Firewall 
logs but I was hoping that there would be an easier way since all the machines 
are connected to the domain.

Thank you all for your 
replies.

Edwin 



RE: [ActiveDir] OT: Active Directory Browser History Files

2004-07-15 Thread Rimmerman, Russ



Yes we use SurfControl, it works quite well for what you're 
looking for.


From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Creamer, 
MarkSent: Thursday, July 15, 2004 11:49 AMTo: 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] OT: Active 
Directory Browser History Files


In my 
opinion, you need an acceptable use policy, and you need to have all the users 
agree to it. You then need a product like surfCONTROL. They have versions for 
various proxy servers as well as firewalls


mc




From: Edwin 
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Thursday, July 15, 2004 10:44 
AMTo: 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]Subject: [ActiveDir] OT: Active Directory 
Browser History Files

In our domain we use roaming 
profiles. What I would like to know is if there is an easy way to monitor 
the web sites that end users are looking at while at their workstations. 
We have users that are going to site that may offend others and this needs to be 
addressed.

I am aware of reviewing the Firewall 
logs but I was hoping that there would be an easier way since all the machines 
are connected to the domain.

Thank you all for your 
replies.

Edwin 


~~This e-mail is confidential, may contain proprietary informationof the Cooper Cameron Corporation and its operating Divisionsand may be confidential or privileged.This e-mail should be read, copied, disseminated and/or used onlyby the addressee. If you have received this message in error pleasedelete it, together with any attachments, from your system.~~

RE: [ActiveDir] OT: Active Directory Browser History Files

2004-07-15 Thread Rutherford, Robert
Title: Message



Websense is also a good product which I have used for many years. It will 
work with Checkpoint firewalls directly or you can hook it into a proxy, i.e. 
ISA, Squid, etc. I personally prefer it to SurfControl, but that is just my 
opinion.

Try 
them out.

  
  -Original Message-From: Creamer, Mark 
  [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: 15 July 2004 17:49To: 
  [EMAIL PROTECTED]Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] OT: Active 
  Directory Browser History Files
  
  In my 
  opinion, you need an acceptable use policy, and you need to have all the users 
  agree to it. You then need a product like surfCONTROL. They have versions for 
  various proxy servers as well as firewalls
  
  
  mc
  
  
  
  
  From: Edwin 
  [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Thursday, July 15, 2004 10:44 
  AMTo: 
  [EMAIL PROTECTED]Subject: [ActiveDir] OT: Active Directory 
  Browser History Files
  
  In our domain we use roaming 
  profiles. What I would like to know is if there is an easy way to
  monitor the web sites that end users are looking at while at their 
  workstations. We have users that are going to site that may offend
  others and this needs to be addressed.
  
  I am aware of reviewing the 
  Firewall logs but I was hoping that there would be an easier way since all the 
  machines are connected to the domain.
  
  Thank you all for your 
  replies.
  
  Edwin 
This e-mail and the information it contains are confidential and may be privileged. If you have received this e-mail in error please notify the sender immediately and delete the material from any computer. Unless you are the intended recipient, you should not copy this e-mail for any purpose, or disclose its contents to any other person. The MCPS-PRS Alliance is not responsible for the completeness or accuracy of this communication as it has been transmitted over a public network. Whilst the MCPS-PRS Alliance monitors all communications for potential viruses, we accept no responsibility for any loss or damage caused by this e-mail and the information it contains.It is the recipient's responsibility to scan this e-mail and any attachments for viruses. Any e-mails sent to and from the MCPS-PRS Alliance servers may be monitored for quality control and other purposes.The MCPS-PRS Alliance Limited is a limited company registered in England under company number 03444246 whose registered office is at c/o 29-33 Berners Street, London, W1T 3AB.


RE: [ActiveDir] OT: Active Directory Browser History Files

2004-07-15 Thread Craig Cerino








Surf Control ( both Email and WEB) here
too  great package. You can get a fully operational 30 trial from their
web site - - definitely worth a look.











From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Rimmerman, Russ
Sent: Thursday, July 15, 2004
12:56 PM
To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] OT:
Active Directory Browser History Files





Yes we use SurfControl, it works quite
well for what you're looking for.









From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Creamer, Mark
Sent: Thursday, July 15, 2004
11:49 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] OT:
Active Directory Browser History Files

In my
opinion, you need an acceptable use policy, and you need to have all the users
agree to it. You then need a product like surfCONTROL. They have versions for
various proxy servers as well as firewalls





mc











From: Edwin
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Thursday, July 15, 2004
10:44 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [ActiveDir] OT: Active
Directory Browser History Files





In our domain we use roaming profiles. What I would
like to know is if there is an easy way to monitor the web sites that end users
are looking at while at their workstations. We have users that are going
to site that may offend others and this needs to be addressed.



I am aware of reviewing the Firewall logs but I was hoping
that there would be an easier way since all the machines are connected to the
domain.



Thank you all for your replies.



Edwin 






~~This e-mail is confidential, may contain proprietary informationof the Cooper Cameron Corporation and its operating Divisionsand may be confidential or privileged.This e-mail should be read, copied, disseminated and/or used onlyby the addressee. If you have received this message in error pleasedelete it, together with any attachments, from your system.~~

RE: [ActiveDir] OT: Active Directory Browser History Files

2004-07-15 Thread Craig Cerino
Title: Message








The issue I had with Websense and
Webtrends (and the like) are just that  the time it takes to load
firewall logs to do reporting and so forth.

Surf Control uses SQL (or MSDE if you
prefer) info is loaded almost instantly and the result sets are nearly as
quick.



I cant say enough (positive) about Surf
Control.



The canned reporting is pretty good - -
and if youre running Crystal
 you can really get some granular result sets.











From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Rutherford, Robert
Sent: Thursday, July 15, 2004 1:06
PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] OT:
Active Directory Browser History Files







Websense is also a good product which I
have used for many years. It will work with Checkpoint firewalls directly or
you can hook it into a proxy, i.e. ISA, Squid, etc. I personally prefer it to
SurfControl, but that is just my opinion.











Try them out.





-Original Message-
From: Creamer, Mark
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: 15 July 2004 17:49
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] OT:
Active Directory Browser History Files

In my opinion,
you need an acceptable use policy, and you need to have all the users agree to
it. You then need a product like surfCONTROL. They have versions for various
proxy servers as well as firewalls





mc











From: Edwin
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Thursday, July 15, 2004
10:44 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [ActiveDir] OT: Active
Directory Browser History Files





In our domain we use roaming profiles. What I would
like to know is if there is an easy way to monitor the web sites that end users
are looking at while at their workstations. We have users that are going
to site that may offend others and this needs to be addressed.



I am aware of reviewing the Firewall logs but I was hoping
that there would be an easier way since all the machines are connected to the
domain.



Thank you all for your replies.



Edwin 




This e-mail and the information it contains are confidential and may be
privileged. If you have received this e-mail in error please notify the sender
immediately and delete the material from any computer. Unless you are the
intended recipient, you should not copy this e-mail for any purpose, or
disclose its contents to any other person. 
The MCPS-PRS Alliance is not responsible for the completeness or accuracy of
this communication as it has been transmitted over a public network. Whilst the
MCPS-PRS Alliance monitors all communications for potential viruses, we accept
no responsibility for any loss or damage caused by this e-mail and the
information it contains.
It is the recipient's responsibility to scan this e-mail and any attachments
for viruses. Any 
e-mails sent to and from the MCPS-PRS Alliance servers may be monitored for
quality control and other purposes.

The MCPS-PRS Alliance Limited is a limited company registered in England under
company number 03444246 whose registered office is at c/o 29-33 Berners Street, London,
 W1T 3AB.








RE: [ActiveDir] OT: Active Directory Browser History Files

2004-07-15 Thread Passo, Larry
Title: Message








I have no idea what version of Websense
you looked at but our installation of Websense Enterprise 5.2 IS on SQL. Since
our database grows at least 40MB a day we didnt go with the option for MSDE.



I positively love the reporting tools.
Their Explorer is the main reason why I chose it over Surf Control after I did
the evaluation of both products. It allows you to rapidly look at an overview
of your data and then drill down on the subcategory of your choice (then to a
subcategory of that subcategory.). Their Reporter give you the granular reports
similar to what you get from Crystal.











From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Craig Cerino
Sent: Thursday, July 15, 2004
10:23 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] OT:
Active Directory Browser History Files





The issue I had with Websense and
Webtrends (and the like) are just that  the time it takes to load
firewall logs to do reporting and so forth.

Surf Control uses SQL (or MSDE if you
prefer) info is loaded almost instantly and the result sets are nearly as
quick.



I cant say enough (positive) about
Surf Control.



The canned reporting is pretty good - -
and if youre running Crystal
 you can really get some granular result sets.











From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Rutherford, Robert
Sent: Thursday, July 15, 2004 1:06
PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] OT:
Active Directory Browser History Files







Websense is also a good product which I
have used for many years. It will work with Checkpoint firewalls directly or
you can hook it into a proxy, i.e. ISA, Squid, etc. I personally prefer it to
SurfControl, but that is just my opinion.











Try them out.





-Original Message-
From: Creamer, Mark
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: 15 July 2004 17:49
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] OT:
Active Directory Browser History Files

In my
opinion, you need an acceptable use policy, and you need to have all the users
agree to it. You then need a product like surfCONTROL. They have versions for
various proxy servers as well as firewalls





mc











From: Edwin
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Thursday, July 15, 2004
10:44 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [ActiveDir] OT: Active Directory
Browser History Files





In our domain we use roaming profiles. What I would
like to know is if there is an easy way to monitor the web sites that end users
are looking at while at their workstations. We have users that are going
to site that may offend others and this needs to be addressed.



I am aware of reviewing the Firewall logs but I was hoping
that there would be an easier way since all the machines are connected to the
domain.



Thank you all for your replies.



Edwin 




This e-mail and the information it contains are confidential and may be
privileged. If you have received this e-mail in error please notify the sender
immediately and delete the material from any computer. Unless you are the
intended recipient, you should not copy this e-mail for any purpose, or
disclose its contents to any other person. 
The MCPS-PRS Alliance is not responsible for the completeness or accuracy of
this communication as it has been transmitted over a public network. Whilst the
MCPS-PRS Alliance monitors all communications for potential viruses, we accept
no responsibility for any loss or damage caused by this e-mail and the
information it contains.
It is the recipient's responsibility to scan this e-mail and any attachments
for viruses. Any 
e-mails sent to and from the MCPS-PRS Alliance servers may be monitored for
quality control and other purposes.

The MCPS-PRS Alliance Limited is a limited company registered in England
under company number 03444246 whose registered office is at c/o 29-33 Berners Street, London, W1T 3AB.








RE: [ActiveDir] OT: Active Directory Browser History Files

2004-07-15 Thread Craig Cerino
Title: Message








Allow me to elaborate (which I should
have done in the first place J ) - -when I started looking into replacements for WebTrends (almost
two years ago) both Webtrends and Websense were still working off logs and that
really bothered me. Which (along with a peer recommendation) lead me to look at
Surf Control, which you could not pay me to use anything else.



I am aware of the reporting abilities of
Websense (current versions) but we have Crystal
running here too so there is nothing I cant get from my SQL database
from the SurfControl box. I was just stating the basics for Edwin since I didnt
know the particulars of his environment (how much space the daily traffic may
take up, comfort with SQL vs. MSDE  if they had Crystal etc)



When it all comes down to the wire - -
after evaluation it depends on what you are more comfortable with and have more
confidence in. After evaluating a good amount of products (over the course of a
little over a year) Surf Control came out on top of everything I looked at.
That coupled with their tech support  their staff in general and the way
they run their company and take care of their people - - it was a no brainier
for me at that point.











From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Passo, Larry
Sent: Thursday, July 15, 2004 2:20
PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] OT:
Active Directory Browser History Files





I have no idea what version of Websense
you looked at but our installation of Websense Enterprise 5.2 IS on SQL.
Since our database grows at least 40MB a day we didnt go with the
option for MSDE.



I positively love the reporting tools.
Their Explorer is the main reason why I chose it over Surf Control after I did
the evaluation of both products. It allows you to rapidly look at an overview
of your data and then drill down on the subcategory of your choice (then to a
subcategory of that subcategory.). Their Reporter give you the granular
reports similar to what you get from Crystal.











From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Craig Cerino
Sent: Thursday, July 15, 2004
10:23 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] OT:
Active Directory Browser History Files





The issue I had with Websense and
Webtrends (and the like) are just that  the time it takes to load
firewall logs to do reporting and so forth.

Surf Control uses SQL (or MSDE if you
prefer) info is loaded almost instantly and the result sets are nearly as
quick.



I cant say enough (positive) about
Surf Control.



The canned reporting is pretty good - -
and if youre running Crystal
 you can really get some granular result sets.











From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Rutherford, Robert
Sent: Thursday, July 15, 2004 1:06
PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] OT:
Active Directory Browser History Files







Websense is also a good product which I
have used for many years. It will work with Checkpoint firewalls directly or
you can hook it into a proxy, i.e. ISA, Squid, etc. I personally prefer it to
SurfControl, but that is just my opinion.











Try them out.





-Original Message-
From: Creamer, Mark
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: 15 July 2004 17:49
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] OT:
Active Directory Browser History Files

In my opinion,
you need an acceptable use policy, and you need to have all the users agree to
it. You then need a product like surfCONTROL. They have versions for various
proxy servers as well as firewalls





mc











From: Edwin
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Thursday, July 15, 2004
10:44 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [ActiveDir] OT: Active
Directory Browser History Files





In our domain we use roaming profiles. What I would
like to know is if there is an easy way to monitor the web sites that end users
are looking at while at their workstations. We have users that are going
to site that may offend others and this needs to be addressed.



I am aware of reviewing the Firewall logs but I was hoping
that there would be an easier way since all the machines are connected to the
domain.



Thank you all for your replies.



Edwin 




This e-mail and the information it contains are confidential and may be
privileged. If you have received this e-mail in error please notify the sender
immediately and delete the material from any computer. Unless you are the
intended recipient, you should not copy this e-mail for any purpose, or
disclose its contents to any other person. 
The MCPS-PRS Alliance is not responsible for the completeness or accuracy of
this communication as it has been transmitted over a public network. Whilst the
MCPS-PRS Alliance monitors all communications for potential viruses, we accept
no responsibility for any loss or damage caused by this e-mail and the
information it contains.
It is the recipient's responsibility to scan this e-mail and any attachments
for viruses. Any 
e

RE: [ActiveDir] OT: Active Directory Browser History Files

2004-07-15 Thread Edwin
Title: Message








Well, it looks like SurfControl is the
application that I am going to start looking into.



I appreciate all of your responses.



Thank you.



Edwin











From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Passo, Larry
Sent: Thursday, July 15, 2004 2:20
PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] OT:
Active Directory Browser History Files





I have no idea what version of Websense
you looked at but our installation of Websense Enterprise 5.2 IS on SQL.
Since our database grows at least 40MB a day we didnt go with the
option for MSDE.



I positively love the reporting tools. Their
Explorer is the main reason why I chose it over Surf Control after I did the
evaluation of both products. It allows you to rapidly look at an overview of
your data and then drill down on the subcategory of your choice (then to a
subcategory of that subcategory.). Their Reporter give you the granular
reports similar to what you get from Crystal.











From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Craig Cerino
Sent: Thursday, July 15, 2004
10:23 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] OT:
Active Directory Browser History Files





The issue I had with Websense and
Webtrends (and the like) are just that  the time it takes to load
firewall logs to do reporting and so forth.

Surf Control uses SQL (or MSDE if you
prefer) info is loaded almost instantly and the result sets are nearly as
quick.



I cant say enough (positive) about
Surf Control.



The canned reporting is pretty good - -
and if youre running Crystal
 you can really get some granular result sets.











From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Rutherford, Robert
Sent: Thursday, July 15, 2004 1:06
PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] OT:
Active Directory Browser History Files







Websense is also a good product which I
have used for many years. It will work with Checkpoint firewalls directly or
you can hook it into a proxy, i.e. ISA, Squid, etc. I personally prefer it to
SurfControl, but that is just my opinion.











Try them out.





-Original Message-
From: Creamer, Mark
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: 15 July 2004 17:49
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] OT:
Active Directory Browser History Files

In my
opinion, you need an acceptable use policy, and you need to have all the users
agree to it. You then need a product like surfCONTROL. They have versions for
various proxy servers as well as firewalls





mc











From: Edwin
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Thursday, July 15, 2004 10:44
AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [ActiveDir] OT: Active
Directory Browser History Files





In our domain we use roaming profiles. What I would
like to know is if there is an easy way to monitor the web sites that end users
are looking at while at their workstations. We have users that are going
to site that may offend others and this needs to be addressed.



I am aware of reviewing the Firewall logs but I was hoping that
there would be an easier way since all the machines are connected to the
domain.



Thank you all for your replies.



Edwin 




This e-mail and the information it contains are confidential and may be
privileged. If you have received this e-mail in error please notify the sender
immediately and delete the material from any computer. Unless you are the
intended recipient, you should not copy this e-mail for any purpose, or
disclose its contents to any other person. 
The MCPS-PRS Alliance is not responsible for the completeness or accuracy of
this communication as it has been transmitted over a public network. Whilst the
MCPS-PRS Alliance monitors all communications for potential viruses, we accept
no responsibility for any loss or damage caused by this e-mail and the
information it contains.
It is the recipient's responsibility to scan this e-mail and any attachments
for viruses. Any 
e-mails sent to and from the MCPS-PRS Alliance servers may be monitored for
quality control and other purposes.

The MCPS-PRS Alliance Limited is a limited company registered in England
under company number 03444246 whose registered office is at c/o 29-33 Berners Street, London, W1T 3AB.