Hi all,

having come into a relatively established small company a little while
ago there were a number of big ticket things that needed to be done
which took up most of my concentration for the first few months.  Now
they're done, the tidying up of the corporate systems and facilities
is beginning.  And this is where I'm hitting a problem; wise-assed
users and a problem with lots of personal files being stored on
company laptops (I don't just mean a letter to the local council; I'm
talking GBs of iTunes, movies, photos etc.) along with a culture that
people treat company laptops as if they were their own.  While I see
no problem with a little reasonable personal use, 40Gb of movies on a
laptop including the odd little trojan on "funny" video clips is
causing problems for my desktop staff when they're supporting users
(especially when said users expect/demand that all of their personal
stuff to be copied onto any new machine they get during rebuilds).

Obviously I need to have a chat with HR and legal about this before
kicking off communications to the whole company along the lines of
"stop taking the mickey, people", but having never done this kind of
thing before (I'm a pointy-end operations person by experience, not
corporate IT which came as an added bonus in this job) I'm not sure
how to go about the whole culture change on use of laptops.  My gut
feeling is to go in hard and say "stop it or we'll delete it all for
you", but I know that's not going to win hearts and minds.  The other
thing is that whichever tack I take on this, there are a good few
users will argue and poke holes and try to find ways to circumvent
whatever is mandated/requested.  There is something in the AUP, but it
is quite permissive "Employees are responsible for exercising good
judgment regarding the reasonableness of personal use.".

Anyone here have any advice to offer on good ways to get the ball
rolling without causing a riot amongst my users?


K
-- 
http://www.totkat.org/
_______________________________________________
Tech mailing list
[email protected]
http://lopsa.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tech
This list provided by the League of Professional System Administrators
 http://lopsa.org/

Reply via email to