I’m confused. They want to restore, verify and *THEN* wipe the drive?
Anyway, in both situations (freeware and take computer home) I would argue my case. If overruled, I would document my disagreement and the fact that it is against my recommendations and be prepared for the fallout. Also, get your resume updated. This place is likely to implode. Regards, Hank Arnold Consumer Security “There are 10 kinds of people in the world... Those who understand binary and those who don't.” My Blog: <http://it.toolbox.com/blogs/personal-pc-assistant/> http://it.toolbox.com/blogs/personal-pc-assistant/ Twitter: @Hank_PCDoc Facebook: <https://www.facebook.com/hank.arnold.96> https://www.facebook.com/hank.arnold.96 From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of D R Sent: Wednesday, January 28, 2015 8:56 PM To: [email protected] Subject: [NTSysADM] Freeware in a corporate setting This is an open question to everyone on this list. Thanks in advance. Question: What would you do if a company 'requires' you to download freeware to be used in a corporate setting? Issue: Currently on a contract and the employer is requiring the technician(s) to download software from the net to wipe hard drives for a computer swap out. Old computer needs the hard drive wiped. But, they want the technician(s) to download freeware and use that in a corporate setting. But, these computers are in a corporate/bank environment. They have allocated only so much time per machine to perform a capture/backup of the user profile and a restore to be done. Once the restore is complete, they do want the user to verify if all of there software, (MS Office, etc.,) before the wipe is done on the drive. I don't mind using freeware to work on mine, or a friend's computer, to get something taken care of. But requiring the technician to download and use freeware in a corporate setting is something entirely different. Don't most of the EULA/GNU License agreements stipulate it is ok for the software to be used, for individual use, but in business/corporate setting that a multi-use/group license must be purchased? Also, if you were the technician, and a manager, who is in charge of this contract, told you it was 'ok' to take home a laptop/desktop so you could finish doing the wipe of the hard drive, after you have submitted your time, wouldn't you find that suspect? I do. And on so many levels, too. Thoughts? -- Daniel Rodriguez [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>

