IMHO, this is not the most effective way of going about it.

I would instead enforce that IE (and if you can, any other browsers)
to automatically detect proxy settings, then set up
http://wpad.example.com/wpad.dat, then configure wpad.dat with the
settings you want.

That way, if the above URL isn't available - because they're outside
your perimeter, for example - then the browser is free to go direct,
and not use the proxy.

Kurt

On Mon, Jul 12, 2010 at 04:08, Gavin Wilby <[email protected]> wrote:
> Good Afternoon all,
> I have a quick question regarding Internet Proxys.
> I have a site that has a GPO that forces all users to to run through the
> Message Labs proxy server. The policy forces it so it cannot be turned off,
> and there are one or two exceptions in that policy.
> Now this is all well and good right up until the point that one of the users
> (a director) takes his laptop out of the building, and then disappears
> abroad with it without telling us. The internet then stops working for him,
> as Im guessing that its trying to use a proxy server that it can neither
> find, nor authenticate to. Due to the policy being forced he, as an end user
> cant turn it off, and we have resorted to manually changing the registry to
> get it working again.
> The GPO mentioned above is of course a USER based policy, so I cant omit his
> laptop from it, and although I could omit HIM from it, I dont really want
> to, as it means he has free rein on every PC he logs into.
> No doubt Im missing something blindingly obvious here, but whats going to be
> the best solution?
>
> --
> Gavin Wilby,
> Twitter: http://twitter.com/gavin_wilby
>
>
>
>

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