in reply to Re^2: Why is my image obtained by LWP displayed as garbage (i.e. plain/text)?
in thread Why is my image obtained by LWP displayed as garbage (i.e. plain/text)?

defeating the corporate firewall may sound like a fun thing to do but can get you in to loads of trouble. Loss of a job and/or criminal/civil prosecution. It's just not worth the hassle. IMHO

Jason L. Froebe

Team Sybase member

No one has seen what you have seen, and until that happens, we're all going to think that you're nuts. - Jack O'Neil, Stargate SG-1

  • Comment on Re^3: Why is my image obtained by LWP displayed as garbage (i.e. plain/text)?

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Re^4: Why is my image obtained by LWP displayed as garbage (i.e. plain/text)?
by holli (Abbot) on Oct 19, 2005 at 21:20 UTC
    loads of trouble
    Last week three of 4 of our young trainees (15-17 years old) got fired. One of them (a darn pretty girl which I would have been glad to welcome in my office (all trainees spend four weeks in the IT department)) has been told the password for the time registration system, to stand in for some colleague who was ill. Unfortately the colleague didn't change the password afterwards...

    And so she happily added hours on the time account of her and two friends. Nobody would have ever noticed it, but out of sheer spite she reduced the account of someone she did not like. Of course that person complained and investigations followed.


    holli, /regexed monk/
Re^4: Why is my image obtained by LWP displayed as garbage (i.e. plain/text)?
by monarch (Priest) on Oct 20, 2005 at 00:40 UTC
    The majority of corporate firewalls are run by morons who would flee in terror at the mere suggestion of scripting or programming languages such as Perl or C.

    Maybe the security staff think they are gurus because they can actually work out an access-list on a Cisco router or *horrors* use Visual Basic in their spare time.

    If you know what you're doing, by passing the corporate firewall is never an unworthy endeavour.

    But I would never, ever contemplate downloading or viewing porn at work. That's a one-way ticket to humiliation and never getting another job.

      >>If you know what you're doing, by passing the corporate firewall is never an unworthy endeavour

      :-)


      In regards to your last statement - I completely agree. I'm not trying to view sites that I really ought not to be viewing at work. What I'm trying to do is use things like babelfish. I work in Holland during the week and need to translate local web pages - searching for accommodation is a prime example. The image thing is/was just a diversion from the main aim - to be able to remotely retrieve useful and relevant - and yet autoblocked - content using GET and POST.

        IMO, you're going about this the wrong way. If I found you backing through my firewall, and my policies, I'd be pissed. The only engineering you should be doing at this point is *social* engineering.

        Have you tried *asking* the folks who control the firewall if they can open babelfish for you? You have a good reason, and you're a lot less likely to get your pee-pee slapped if you get caught, so why not try that?

        By the way, are you spending working hours trying to do this, or are you doing it on personal time?

        Ahh... understood now. :) When you talked about the firewall, I as well as others, wrongly assumed that you were doing a bit of sneakiness. I'm sorry we assumed the worst.

        Jason L. Froebe

        Team Sybase member

        No one has seen what you have seen, and until that happens, we're all going to think that you're nuts. - Jack O'Neil, Stargate SG-1