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Replacement GINA



 
 
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  #1  
Old May 17th 07, 01:06 AM posted to microsoft.public.windowsxp.customize
bileduct
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Posts: 1
Default Replacement GINA

Hello all,

One of my clients has recently raised a request to see whether it
would be possible to add a button to the logon screen that would allow
a user to read the firm's security policy without actually logging
onto the PC. The standard LegalNoticeText is not adequate due to the
512 character limit.

Does anyone know how this can be achieved? I would appreciate any
advice.

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  #2  
Old May 17th 07, 04:54 AM posted to microsoft.public.windowsxp.customize
HEMI-Powered
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 258
Default Replacement GINA

Today, bileduct made these interesting comments ...

Hello all,

One of my clients has recently raised a request to see whether
it would be possible to add a button to the logon screen that
would allow a user to read the firm's security policy without
actually logging onto the PC. The standard LegalNoticeText is
not adequate due to the 512 character limit.

Does anyone know how this can be achieved? I would appreciate
any advice.

I have no clue if this is possible technically, but since business
users are bound by company policies wrt personnel and security
issues, it would seem that only a very brief summary need be
available at log-in time. I say this because it is assumed that a
user understands the policies when they log in, but even if they do
not, they are still bound by them in their entirety. Ditto for a
company's right to monitor anything and everything an employee does
with company equipment such as recording phone conversations,
logging web hits, E-mails, network storage, time logged on, and
about any statitistic desired. The combined policies affecting an
employee or contract worker's access to IT are likely to be very
large for anything but smaller companies, and are intertwined with
personnel policies, privacy policies, and new federal regulations
brought about by the Patriot Act that requires companies to do
certain things in order to comply with the law.

Good luck!

--
HP, aka Jerry
 




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