Yeah. Didn't get installed, but I agreed to help the user on my own time
with his home PC. Once he gets it connected, my involvement ends. If he
manages to get the keylogger installed on that, I will have nothing to do
with it. All I'll have done is enabled him to connect his home computer to
the internet wirelessly. J

 

John-AldrichTile-Tools

 

From: Carl Houseman [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Thursday, April 15, 2010 2:31 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Ethics issue

 

Wow... so much possible commentary, so little time...

 

In the middle of a nasty divorce, and she still has easy access to his
company-provided laptop for E-mail?  Hmm...

 

And she's stupid enough to write scandalous e-mails on his laptop?

 

First of all, users shouldn't be installing keyloggers on any company-owned
equipment, period.  Doesn't matter the reason, users are not authorized to
conduct surveillance, and in an ideal world, should not be authorized to
install non-company-provided software.  Net effect, you should have said
"can't help you and please uninstall that, it's against company policy, and
if you won't, I'll to take this matter to your boss/HR/whatever."

 

Carl

 

From: John Aldrich [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Thursday, April 15, 2010 2:16 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Ethics issue

 

One of my users is in the middle of a nasty divorce with his wife. He's
trying to install a keylogger on his company laptop so he can get access to
her email (she uses his company-provided laptop at home) and prove she's
been cheating. Obviously Vipre doesn't want to let him install it, but I
overrode Vipre and told it to unquarantine it. My question is, did I do the
right thing or should I make him uninstall it?

 

John-Aldrich

 

 

 

 

 

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