Cutting Security To Cut Costs?
just currious asks: "I work for a large company (10,000+ pc's) who recently out sourced the help desk. After looking at about a year's worth of data we find the 30% to 50% of the calls to the helpdesk are password related (password resets, password changes, etc.) this is alot of calls (at 20+ dollars a pop). Now they want to reduce cost by cutting security, since if you don't have a password, you can't forget it. So here's what upper management wants to do: remove the security from all of our Windows 2000 machines. Has anybody else seen security cut just to save money?"
We need to first know where you work. Actually, just the IPs will be fine.
Now they want to reduce cost by cutting security, since if you don't have a password, you can't forget it.
You obviously not a BOIH(Bastard Operator In Hell):
"I lost my password."
"You've no password."
"What do you mean by no password? What's that big f%#*ing word on the screen saying 'Password'?"
"Just press Enter."
"small cap or all cap?"
"...."
Yes, I have.
Moronically, the highschool I was currently attending. I was the "Assistant Admin" (i WAS the admin, don't let the name fool you).
My principal started getting sick and tired of her front desk people having all of their time wasted by students asking their student numbers (also their password).
She came to me saying to take all passwords off, period. The only exception, mine.
It took 400 flunking students getting straight A report cards magically to set her straight.
Of all the Universal Constants, here's one I know: Nice guys finish last