If you put an authoritative domain in your DNS infrastructure for facebook, and point it at 127.0.0.1, they can't use it.
That's the sum total of *my* thoughts on the matter. Kurt On Wed, Apr 28, 2010 at 19:04, James Hill <james.h...@superamart.com.au> wrote: > We are currently piloting Outlook 2010 and I’m interested in everyone’s > thoughts on the Social Connectors. > > > > Whilst not all of the connectors are available yet it won’t be long before > they are. > > > > What is interesting to me is that it opens up a much larger social/work > interconnect then we had before. Whilst we allow staff to use Social > Networking apps like Facebook we also limit the amount of use to an hour per > day(so they can spend their whole lunch break on there if they wish). But > with integration into business apps, Outlook, the potential for interruption > will be huge. > > > > I’m also curious about the security implications:- > > > > * These programs may send the e-mail addresses from e-mail you send and > receive to third-party social networks. The social networks may use the > e-mail addresses to provide you activity feeds. > > > > What’s to stop this info being spread to other Facebook apps? Farmtown > invites will be going to the CEO from their assistants friends in no time J > > > > Many businesses have a strict policy on social networking which results in > zero access. We haven’t taken that approach here as some research suggests > there MAY be benefits to allowing it. > > > > Interesting times ahead. > > > > > > ~ Finally, powerful endpoint security that ISN'T a resource hog! ~ ~ <http://www.sunbeltsoftware.com/Business/VIPRE-Enterprise/> ~