What will really get me around a blocker? It's "Websense" and blocks even useful sites. Proxies???
Network admin? Pifft. We're an urban school system with one system admin for 52 city schools. You don't just talk to them. Nor do they listen. I respect authority and "play by the rules." I was actually asking for the assistant principal, who asked me. If I needed advice on the morality of the issue, I'd have posted in the community section.emw said:If it's blocking useful sites that you think are legitimately applicable for what you're doing on the school's network, talk to the administrator.
You're using they're network - you play by their rules. If you want full access, find your own ISP and use that instead.
I suppose that's just the father in me talking...
This is a much better post to get your point across than a simple "how do I bypass my school's web security?" You have to admit, it sounded a little fishy.Plymouthbreezer said:Network admin? Pifft. We're an urban school system with one system admin for 52 city schools. You don't just talk to them. Nor do they listen. I respect authority and "play by the rules." I was actually asking for the assistant principal, who asked me. If I needed advice on the morality of the issue, I'd have posted in the community section.
Sorry for the fishy sounding post... I do conquer.emw said:This is a much better post to get your point across than a simple "how do I bypass my school's web security?" You have to admit, it sounded a little fishy.
In the end, shouldn't your assistant principal be asking the principal, who'd ask the superintendent or something? It seems odd that the school administrators would be looking for a way to bypass their own security.
And if there is a way, your assistant principal should be concerned about providing a means to get around security to his students or staff (not sure of your part in this play). Setting up proxies would likely only work if you had another way to the internet outside of the main routers.
emw said:This is a much better post to get your point across than a simple "how do I bypass my school's web security?" You have to admit, it sounded a little fishy.
In the end, shouldn't your assistant principal be asking the principal, who'd ask the superintendent or something? It seems odd that the school administrators would be looking for a way to bypass their own security.
And if there is a way, your assistant principal should be concerned about providing a means to get around security to his students or staff (not sure of your part in this play). Setting up proxies would likely only work if you had another way to the internet outside of the main routers.
Thanks, at least I can give him an educated answer.Timepass said:Well it does make since in some ways. The Network Adminstor doesnt report to school adminsters. He reports to the superindent at best and with 52 schools one AP is small fries and request like that will not aways be taken care of.
As for proxicing out it. that not really going to work simplely because the computer still has to route back to the school and go though there web blocking. Now if there was let say a personal computer at home he could remote desktop to. that could get around it since that computer does not deal school networking.
Prox has it limitions. A VPN might work since all request are sent though it but then again that gets into some pretty messy stuff to set up.