When we started allowing the game consoles on our network, we created a
form for the student to fill out. We require:

- Name
- Res Hall Room & Phone
- Email from our system (we do not accept 3rd party email accounts)
- Game console type (to check against known strings of MACs)
- MAC address

At the bottom, they sign it and it states that they accept our terms of
use (read as if you try and spoof this MAC on a PC you lose the right to
have the console on the network ever). We allow the console through on
CCA on our authenticated role. During the day, they can play within the
res hall networks. Then, at the campus firewall, I have rules set to
allow access to the console networks:

- Playstation Network

- X-Box Live

Since our classrooms and offices share the same Internet line as the res
halls, Internet gaming is restricted to weekends.



Timothy Grzeczka
Network Analyst , Dominican University
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
W: (708) 524-6568
Profile: http://www.linkedin.com/pub/3/a5b/706

-----Original Message-----
From: Cisco Clean Access Users and Administrators
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Jeff Stewart
Sent: Tuesday, January 22, 2008 12:55 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Gaming Consoles

Anyone doing anything besides 'wild cards' for gaming consoles?

-- 
Jeff Stewart

Network Engineer
Network Computing & Support
Western Kentucky University

Reply via email to