Anonymous wrote:You never ever use a work computer or device for anything other than work.
Anonymous wrote:The above is a good point--if this is a work computer, the company could be decrypting https traffic (essentially a man-in-the-middle attack) by using custom certificates in the browser and on a proxy. The user could probably find those certificates if he actually looked, but almost no one would.
Maybe the best option here is a bootable Linux (or other OS) USB flash drive to boot into a non-company-managed OS to run the browser and/or VPN connection tools. But most companies that are this draconian would disable booting from flash drives and probably would also enable secure boot.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do not use your work computer for anything you don't want your employer to see. They can see everything.
Incorrect.
If you have a VPN installed and use it to read the NY Times all day at work, all your IT administrator sees is that you have a browser window open and it is connected to a VPN. Where you use that VPN to take you is encrypted. Concealing your browsing history is like 95% of the reason to use a VPN.
lol wrong
OP, just assume that everything you do on a corporate computer can be monitored.
Not wrong. 100% right. And no one said anything about corporate, moron.
Honestly, please stop talking about things your don't understand. At a minimum, your browser history is stored locally regardless of VPN usage and can be easily accessed by an administrator, let alone an EDR agent or similar.
And "If I'm using a VPN on my computer at work" pretty clearly implies using a work computer.
You are way in over your head. It's simple to clear history, cache and logs on the machine being used. You can set it to wipe 15 minutes It's even simpler to prevent that from being stored on the machine anyway. And unless IT is logged into your machine they would never see it. And if your company has $250 an hour to hire a babysitter, per machine, then you'd already know this. No one outside of the IC does anything remotely like this. If you are a research analyst at NIH, no one has a damn clue what you are doing on a VPN. Ask me how I know.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Related question for DC. Uses a work laptop and uses it solely for work. However the outlook email is also on personal phone along with several other personal email account (work doesn’t provide phones). Can any internet searches from phone be seen from work email in search history?
Bump. Can anyone answer this? They don’t issue work phones.