Path: utzoo!utgpu!cunews!micor!latour!ecicrl!clewis From: clewis@ferret.ocunix.on.ca (Chris Lewis) Newsgroups: comp.unix.admin Subject: Re: Questions about UNIX viruses Message-ID: <1426@ecicrl.ocunix.on.ca> Date: 23 Apr 91 04:17:10 GMT References: <1991Apr01.203128.13427@esleng.ocunix.on.ca> <579@bria> <14589@ulysses.att.com> <713@minya.UUCP> Organization: Elegant Communications Inc., Ottawa, Canada Lines: 37 > >I am facing this at my job (which is not at Princeton University). The > >company I work for has a policy of (almost) no internet connections. > >Worse, it has a policy that we are not to have any non-company-owned > >software on our computers. This means no software from Usenet. I > >think the goal may be reasonable, but I think the means are not for two > >reasons: 1. the policy probably won't work, and 2. it restricts free > >exchange of ideas. The latter, in my belief, affects productivity, so > >bottom-line-watchers ought to care about it too. > I would agree that this is a foolish policy. I can understand their > security fears, but I believe that the free exchange of ideas is > extremely important in a scientific/engineering community. You may be jumping to conclusions that this is entirely security related. There are several other reasons for such a policy: - to ensure that they can establish that they are legally entitled to *have* the software in the first place. More than a few companies have been caught having pirated copies of commercial software. (and some has accidentally slipped into the net) - so there's no arguments as to the ownership of pieces of their own products. Ie: some company finding out that they can't distribute their product until they negotiate licenses with the originator of a library routine that they used. - so that they can maintain some sort of support control over their computer environments. Ie: finding out that some PD program has infiltrated into being vital to their operations, and then they can't upgrade to a machine that can't run the package. Management likes knowing their dependencies. - Support... Several major companies have policies that PD is okay, but freeware (copyrighted) is not. In some cases these policies are quite justified, for some companies are frequent targets of "theft of intellectual property" lawsuits for such things. -- Chris Lewis, Phone: (613) 832-0541, Domain: clewis@ferret.ocunix.on.ca UUCP: ...!cunews!latour!ecicrl!clewis; Ferret Mailing List: ferret-request@eci386; Psroff (not Adobe Transcript) enquiries: psroff-request@eci386 or Canada 416-832-0541. Psroff 3.0 in c.s.u soon!