Biker79 wrote: » Probably not related to this thread, but I would say contractors and outsourced workers are more vulnerable to automation and less favourable WFH conditions.
TheIrishGrover wrote: » This is simply untrue. Simple as. And pretending to be knowledgeable in a field that you know nothing about negates all your (seriously ill-informed) points. Leaving Citrix aside.... (Cloud-based? That alone was enough of a give-away. Citrix tends to be on-prem. If you cannot differentiate between remote connection and cloud-based VPCs then I do not know what you are doing in your job as "Work[ing] specifically with networking programming and security") So sticking with VPN connections: Assuming that a remote worker's internal network is using RFC1918 (Guaranteed) and a company is also using RFC1918. Typically an end user would initiate trafficto corporate site and get their internal IP addressing NATted behind a single specifically-allocated RFC1918 IP address. How then does the company isolate its own internal RFC1918 IP address pool from the remote RFC1918 pool? You cannot initiate traffic to a one-to-many PAT and specify the translated destination. Extreme examples: Maybe they are using Policy-Based IPSec VPN connections. Again, you need to isolate remote and local address pools simply to allow the traffic so there are no encryption domain overlaps. As you must know, Encryption Domain overlaps result in packets being dropped and not allowed over the tunnel. Again, NAT required. Route-Based VPN? Same issues. So everyone is entitled to their POV but you should not pretend to be knowledgeable in a field in order to spread misinformation. I do not know what your agenda is other than scaring people with "insider information". Even if your inaccurate comments above were accurate (They are not - any manager with a little knowledge can penetrate and sweep your entire network... Really?) as other have said, WHY?
ELM327 wrote: » You shouldnt (BAU) be using a personal device for work. There's a bit of leeway during covid but outside of pandemic times if you wfh you do so on a secure device supplied by your company
Strumms wrote: » He sounds like a grade A pisshole himself. When the work is assigned to people his only concerns should be that it’s completed accurately and in a timely fashion. If I’m an employer and i today assign an employee ... - online training class ( 2 hours long approximately ) - three training reports ( 3 hours long approximately ) - webinar call with myself and teammates ( 1 hour ) - sundry tasks, e-mail etc ( 1 hour ) 7 hours work, one hour for lunch, that’s their 8 hour day. I’m not going to try nor would I be able to micromanage every minute of their day. An email when they clock in, same when they take lunch, when they return and a quick 2 minute phone call at 5 pm as they log off to recap the day... simple. You are dealing with professional adults.
uli84 wrote: » Highly doubt anyone is as productive working from home as they are in the office, unless single and living on their own.
KyussB wrote: » Unless you're a contractor who has to pay to supply your own devices - which is the future for everyone working from home...
KyussB wrote: » Don't see how that is the case - contract work makes us all more like e.g. deliveroo drivers - easily disposable, with less benefits/rights. It can be quite good if you've got a good gig going, a regular business you contract with - but now that WFH is becoming the norm, and employees are all going to be made contractors - those days of having a good gig as a contractor, may be limited...
ELM327 wrote: » Our tax laws will not allow that. Contract work is too tax advantageous to allow it to the great unwashed.
Interested Observer wrote: » This is about as ridiculous as your 'you will be spied on in your own home' notion.
ELM327 wrote: » If you treat your employees as children this is the type of thing to do. People generally leave those jobs though, so there will be a high rate of attrition which brings with it cost. That person should not be a manager.
Jim Root wrote: » Soo....how are office people dealing with talk of going back to the office; are you getting pressure? What target date is your company looking at reopening? I’m wondering about how my colleagues will react when asked to return,
KyussB wrote: » You've had several posters here say straight out that employers/managers are looking at putting spyware on employees home devices, that they have direct experience of this... What exactly are you going to do, if your employer tells you they'll only employ you as a contractor from here on? All economists are talking about the biggest economic crisis in a century - are you just going to tell your employers they can stuff it, and then go jobless?
KyussB wrote: » Did you even read a single thing posted? I'm taking issue with corporate spyware being mandatorily installed on employee's devices - not with VPN connections or cloud-hosted OS's (though the latter does have some - but not as much - scope for issues). You seem to be mistaking the role of a network admin, with that of a networking/security programmer. Hint: If it doesn't involve writing code, it's not programming.
Mrs OBumble wrote: » I had a conversation just yesterday with a manager who is concerned about how he knows his employees are working when they should be working. In this case, I was able to suggest using an existing call tracking tool, but sooner or later he will get to thinking "how do I know it was Fred, not just someone logged in as him, who placed those calls".
Mrs OBumble wrote: » I love the way you can make assessments like that without having a clue what industry this is, or what regulatory requirements apply. In this case, the company actually has very high staff retention, most staff have been there for years. Some customers have contractual requirements around all phone calls being recorded (they're made thru the computers, absolutely not through home phones) and around identify validation for staff doing jobs. There are some legal requirements around when some phone calls can be made. The manager has to have evidence that these are all being met - actual evidence, not just motherhood-and-apple-pie statements about professional adults. Also, all employers should have evidence that staff are working no more than 48 hours per week on average in any job, and that they have at least 11 hours between shifts. Whether you think this is micro-managing or not, it's a legal requirement.
mariaalice wrote: » How could you monitor work that can't really be quantified by how long someone is logged on to their computer? what if it's more nebulous than that..............
Augeo wrote: » It seems to be be a prevalent thought that no actual skilled or senior folk can wfh ......... only folk furiously playing with excel and word all day to hit their target of 257 pieces of mundane completed sh1te can work from home
mayo londoner wrote: » 29th June we are being told, and not exactly any choice in the mater, dreading it.