I heard that in QLD hospitals there is a captive DNS portal, before
you get to the internet, which had a picture of the premier (whoever
it was then) and said, in almost these words "Don't surf for porn" -
can't remember the guys name, but he wasn't pretty, I imagine it had
the desired effect.

On Feb 28, 2:02 pm, Christian Catchpole <christ...@catchpole.net>
wrote:
> It's all a mix of those depending on where you go.  Australian
> government lock their web and machines down pretty tightly.  And they
> arn't used to being development shops.  I had to get a special auth to
> install software.
>
> Symantec was interesting.  While security was high, and Symantec Anti-
> virus on all machine (duh!), I did notice you could browse to sites
> that are normally locked down. ebay, facebook etc.  Well, since their
> slogan is "confidence in a connected world" it would be hypercritical
> for them to lock down their staff while claiming to be empowering the
> world.
>
> I worked for a US finance technology company which had wifi
> honeypots.  The idea was if you connected to these "free wi-fi"
> connections they might come around and break your legs.  But they had
> been victim to some scandal so I understand their security.

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