Bill and Doris,
Speaking strictly from a Military stand point. If the user is in the
Military report this to his Commander. Supply the Commander with the Policy
that prohibits the use of the network for this purpose. The Commander can
then take legal action to suggest to this soldier not to do this in the
future.
If it continues further non-judicial punishment can and will result. At
first the soldier should be counseled that he/she is volating an Standard
Operating Procedure, Regulation, or Command Directive. Also ALL
Soldiers/Sailors/Airmen should be notified of this in writing. All should
be notified that violations of the standard can and will be swiftly dealt
with in a punitive manner. Then if another occurrence happens a (desktop)
Summary Article 15 can be used as a slap on the hands to show that the
Command is Serious about this. This kind can goes away after the soldier
leaves the unit. If a second occurrence happens then a Regular Article 15
can be used. This is punishment and can result in as little as extra duty
(Working Supervised after hours) or as much as a Court Marshal. This kind
stays in the Military Personnel Record and based on the way things go these
days could mean the end of a career before it starts.
The Military can deal with their own via disciplinary action.
If it is a Defense Department Civilian then that person can be dealt with
via the Civilian Personnel Office on the base in question. Much the same
way Military Personnel are dealt with.
Hope this helps.
Cary
-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Bill Joynt
Sent: Monday, January 25, 1999 8:11 AM
To: Pavlichek, Doris (GEIS, GE Capital Consulting);
'[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
Subject: RE: RealAudio
Tell the user that if he deliberately bypasses firewall policy, he will be
fired (or at least be in serious trouble).
> -----Original Message-----
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Pavlichek, Doris
> (GEIS, GE Capital Consulting)
> Sent: Monday, January 25, 1999 8:20 AM
> To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
> Subject: RealAudio
>
>
> Question: If users get around a RealAudio port block on a
> Gauntlet firewall
> by telling their browser to use port 80 for RealAudio, is there anyway for
> the firewall administrator to then block RealAudio without blocking all
> internet access? Locking out specific user IPs in order to enforce policy
> is impossible. He's in a military environment and that would not fly.
>
> Thanks in advance..DP
>
> Doris E. Pavlichek, CCNA, CCSA/CCSE
> GEIS via GE Capital Consulting
> 301-340-5674 wk
> 202-255-0112 cell
>
> "Not everything that is counted counts, and not everything that counts can
> be counted." - Albert Einstein
>
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