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Personal files on work computer?
Hello,
What is the best practice for this? A free standing hard drive for my personal stuff? I get taxes and similar data and need a place to store things. I understand keeping this off the work PC. I am suspect on security / long term viability of Google drive or Dropbox. Should I be? Love to hear the braintrust on this. I do have a separate personal computer but I spend 99% of my time on my work rig. So things just pass through even on my personal email. TIA! |
Depending on your companies usage policy having an external hd could be a bit problematic.
I would just email docs to your personal address or keep them in the cloud. I wouldn't worry about google going anywhere. |
It all depends on company policy and the IT department.
Something like OneDrive is easy and fairly secure. Many large companies disable any USB port so thumb drives or external drives are not an option. It would bee too easy to copy sensitive company data or introduce a virus or worm into their system. |
I am employed in state government. There shall be NO mixing of work and personal devices or technologies. Never the twain shall meet. Unfortunately, with two cell phones and two computers, it seems there are a great many communication methods I need to manage. Phone calls, text messages, voice mail, email, etc.
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Back when my wife still worked, she worked for a local state owned university. She had a cell phone and only gave the number to friends. She made it clear if they email or text or call her about work stuff she will hang up, or delete the text or email and never reply. She did not ever want the possibility of her phone getting subpoenaed. They would not pay for a cell phone.
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You have personal emails and information sent to your work computer? In this day and age that is preposterous. Sorry. We let our employees access and use any web-based personal email accounts since that is how personal commerce is done. |
Horrible idea.
You no longer own or have a right to privacy on anything that touches a work computer. |
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I would set up a DropBox account and save your personal stuff there. Access your personal email via cloud e.g. Gmail. Have personal email sent only to personal account, not to work account.
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Same here about 'reasonable' amounts of personal work. I have a personal drive on the network where I keep confidential company stuff and some personal stuff. The reasoning is that I can access it anywhere. I do this with the understanding that anyone with the proper authority can gain access to my personal stuff as I have with terminated employees.
BTW, I hardly use a hard drive for anything. Why? Because my company is very good at back ups. Unfortunately I've had to test it a few times and they've always recovered. Also, when my computer dies, I just order another one, load a couple of programs, and I'm go to go. No loss of data. |
Excellent input. Thank you all. It is great to get opinions from outside my bubble.
Smallish local business of which I am one of the owners. So there is some "wiggle room." I appreciate the strict segregation comments. It is a great dose of reality. Thank you! |
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I use my own. It is so much cleaner and easier. |
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Frankly, it's a bad idea. You never know what will happen and technically you may get the 'not appropriate use of company resources' speech one day. It's the company's machine.
If I try plugging any USB storage device into my work laptop- my work laptop will ENCRYPT that storage device. Then again, I work for a big bank. rjp |
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Since I own the computer I can do personal business on the computer without shifting back and forth between a company asset and my own computer. If I chose to use a company asset to access our online tools, I would not use it for personal business It is that simple. Don’t over think it. |
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