Jacob Orff
December 5th 03, 07:36 PM
So my boss recently got a dial-up account for the company.
Everything's peachy, right? Well, not quite.
See, some of the lower-level employees have been happily
entering their own username/password (for the same ISP) and
using the phone line to dial up to the net and surf. Which
would only be a minor problem, except for the fact that the
company's phone bills (and my boss's temper) have been
going through the roof.
As the resident Guy Who Keeps The Computers Working, I've
been "arrowed" to solve the problem. How do I configure the
system so that the lusers can't change the dial-up
networking username (or create a new connection of their
own to use)? (The company's 'net account password is only
held by senior employees.)
- Jake
Everything's peachy, right? Well, not quite.
See, some of the lower-level employees have been happily
entering their own username/password (for the same ISP) and
using the phone line to dial up to the net and surf. Which
would only be a minor problem, except for the fact that the
company's phone bills (and my boss's temper) have been
going through the roof.
As the resident Guy Who Keeps The Computers Working, I've
been "arrowed" to solve the problem. How do I configure the
system so that the lusers can't change the dial-up
networking username (or create a new connection of their
own to use)? (The company's 'net account password is only
held by senior employees.)
- Jake