What's nice about watching this stream is that I get to see new areas, but I don't know what's really going on, or much about the loot because I don't speak or read the language.
~Rigelberry
*Edit* Even more promising is that we can watch 3 people play without server issues. Looks like they had a clean start in Asia.
this fucking thing is gonna get me fired. i'm ninja-alt/tabbing like crazy in the office right now.
THen you should stop. lol It is not worth it if you get fired ont he day that DIablo 3 comes out. Not a fun time to get home.
lol i know. slight exaggeration i guess, unlikely that i'd get fired for that. besides, my surreptitious surfing skills are inferno-level good.
As an IT Admin I'd advise against doing anything other than work while using anything connected to your office's network, even if its your mobile phone over WiFi. There are tools us IT Pro's use that document and log for indefinite periods of time every single little packet of information that travels across our networks. It's not uncommon for me to receive requests from high ranking execs requesting traffic logs for employees that they have under review. If you give them a reason to investigate your work and your IT department has such tools implemented they will very easily find out every single last web site you visited or action you took over your computer's network connection.
Heck I have one particular scenario where my network traffic monitoring tools send out alerts to human resources every time someone accesses facebook during work hours and it's all perfectly legal as you are not supposed to operate a company's computer system with any sense or pretext of privacy.
good to know. my aunt does IT for a hospital in michigan, and she tells me crazy stories about the stuff they catch people doing/looking at. luckily i work at a small medical office where i am without exaggeration the only computer literate person, and if there is IT work to be done, they make me do it.. heck, at least im not looking at porn, but i suppose to the non-fan, a stream of D3 might look pretty out there.
As an IT Admin I'd advise against doing anything other than work while using anything connected to your office's network, even if its your mobile phone over WiFi. There are tools us IT Pro's use that document and log for indefinite periods of time every single little packet of information that travels across our networks. It's not uncommon for me to receive requests from high ranking execs requesting traffic logs for employees that they have under review. If you give them a reason to investigate your work and your IT department has such tools implemented they will very easily find out every single last web site you visited or action you took over your computer's network connection.
Heck I have one particular scenario where my network traffic monitoring tools send out alerts to human resources every time someone accesses facebook during work hours and it's all perfectly legal as you are not supposed to operate a company's computer system with any sense or pretext of privacy.
As an IT Admin I'd advise against doing anything other than work while using anything connected to your office's network, even if its your mobile phone over WiFi. There are tools us IT Pro's use that document and log for indefinite periods of time every single little packet of information that travels across our networks. It's not uncommon for me to receive requests from high ranking execs requesting traffic logs for employees that they have under review. If you give them a reason to investigate your work and your IT department has such tools implemented they will very easily find out every single last web site you visited or action you took over your computer's network connection.
Heck I have one particular scenario where my network traffic monitoring tools send out alerts to human resources every time someone accesses facebook during work hours and it's all perfectly legal as you are not supposed to operate a company's computer system with any sense or pretext of privacy.
Simple list of all proxies used by Tor. You can either block them all explicitly, negating any form of Tor client from EVER connecting to their proxy servers from within the corporate LAN or I can set the list to be monitored by my network traffic monitor so I can know exactly what users/devices are attempting to browse through Tor proxies. Even then I can see exactly what site you requested from Tor. To us in IT it would look like this:
Computer1 requests www.facebook.com through 101.1.131.133 (a Tor Proxy IP) and 101.1.131.133 replied with the requested content instead of it looking like you went directly towards 69.171.247.37 witch is one of Facebook's public IP's.
It doesn't make the requests that are coming from your computer anonymous to the IT dept, it just shows them that you are actively trying to hide something. What Tor does is hide your actual public IP from the site you are browsing so that the site owner can't pin point who or where you are that's the anonymity it provides.
LAWYERD! Not poking fun at ya bro, just educating you in that using Tor from your work computer, will get you into more trouble rather than stopping you from getting into trouble with your employer.
Sorry, but unless you're one of the exit nodes, you won't be able to read the target website the user is browsing, let alone the content of that site. Nice try. You can see that someone is using TOR, but not what they're doing with TOR.
Of course if you blocked all the proxies, the user *could* simply make a tunnel directly to his home for browsing.
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Uh, no? I paid $60? I don't care what you paid.
~Rigelberry
*Edit* Even more promising is that we can watch 3 people play without server issues. Looks like they had a clean start in Asia.
I'm also looking for a stream with the wings. Let me know if you find one.
lol i know. slight exaggeration i guess, unlikely that i'd get fired for that. besides, my surreptitious surfing skills are inferno-level good.
1500Kbits/sec... for a tiny 360p video, for real? I'd like something under 500Kbits/sec if possible.
As an IT Admin I'd advise against doing anything other than work while using anything connected to your office's network, even if its your mobile phone over WiFi. There are tools us IT Pro's use that document and log for indefinite periods of time every single little packet of information that travels across our networks. It's not uncommon for me to receive requests from high ranking execs requesting traffic logs for employees that they have under review. If you give them a reason to investigate your work and your IT department has such tools implemented they will very easily find out every single last web site you visited or action you took over your computer's network connection.
Heck I have one particular scenario where my network traffic monitoring tools send out alerts to human resources every time someone accesses facebook during work hours and it's all perfectly legal as you are not supposed to operate a company's computer system with any sense or pretext of privacy.
Ever heard of TOR? Good luck monitoring that.
*laughs*
http://proxy.org/tor.shtml
Simple list of all proxies used by Tor. You can either block them all explicitly, negating any form of Tor client from EVER connecting to their proxy servers from within the corporate LAN or I can set the list to be monitored by my network traffic monitor so I can know exactly what users/devices are attempting to browse through Tor proxies. Even then I can see exactly what site you requested from Tor. To us in IT it would look like this:
Computer1 requests www.facebook.com through 101.1.131.133 (a Tor Proxy IP) and 101.1.131.133 replied with the requested content instead of it looking like you went directly towards 69.171.247.37 witch is one of Facebook's public IP's.
It doesn't make the requests that are coming from your computer anonymous to the IT dept, it just shows them that you are actively trying to hide something. What Tor does is hide your actual public IP from the site you are browsing so that the site owner can't pin point who or where you are that's the anonymity it provides.
LAWYERD! Not poking fun at ya bro, just educating you in that using Tor from your work computer, will get you into more trouble rather than stopping you from getting into trouble with your employer.
Of course if you blocked all the proxies, the user *could* simply make a tunnel directly to his home for browsing.