Employee "Disciplined" For Installing Bitcoin Software On Federal Webservers
Fluffeh writes "Around a year ago, a person working for the ABC in Australia with the highest levels of access to systems got caught with his fingers on the CPU cycles. The staffer had installed Bitcoin mining software on the systems used by the Australian broadcaster. While the story made a bit of a splash at the time, it was finally announced today that the staffer hadn't been sacked, but was merely being disciplined by his manager and having his access to systems restricted. All the stories seem a little vague as to what he actually installed, however — on one side he installed the software on a public facing webserver, and the ABC itself admits, 'As this software was for a short time embedded within pages on the ABC website, visitors to these pages may have been exposed to the Bitcoin software,' and 'the Coalition (current Opposition Parties) was planning on quizzing the ABC further about the issue, including filing a request for the code that would have been downloaded to users' machines,' but on the other side there is no mention of the staffer trying to seed a Bitcoin mining botnet through the site, just that mining software had been installed."
Government issued cars with "For Official Use Only" would seem to be an exception to that. I've seen a Lexus around here with that stamped on it with a car seat and groceries piled in it. Sure, there could be an official reason for that but the odds are against it.
I can authoritatively comment on this, that a TDY car for all intents and purposes can be used almost exactly like a privately owned vehicle. TDY is the govt equivalent of a short to medium term business trip (maybe 1 day to I think a max 6 months). Basically its cheaper for the .gov to act like a car leasing company to itself, than to reimburse .gov employee for a rental car. Which is bizarre, you'd think Enterprise Rentacar would donate re-election funds to politicians to take over that apparently lucrative market, but they haven't done so ... yet. Someday it might happen to eliminate the non-scandal scandal stories.
The law says something like "administrative discretion" so its one of those "character" tests where you can do anything your boss allows but don't do anything stupid. This is really the only rule for a govt car. It can be hard for outsiders to wrap their head around this concept of not having 1000 individual specific rules, and only having a general rule of don't do something your boss thinks is dumb. A remarkable amount of .mil paperwork and regulations to death the stupidest little things and also has no paperwork and regulations for some of the most complicated things. Discretion and good taste...
Get permission from boss to drop kid off at daycare, fine no problemo as long as you have that permission. Drive to an occupy-wall-street protest in a non-official role, or as a protester, um... that might be a problem. Food store/restaurant while on TDY, almost certainly OK, that's the whole point of giving you a TDY car. Dive bar while on TDY, could get you in hot water depending on your boss and local culture and especially your behavior (this can be an addition charge in a conduct unbecoming hearing, or it can just be ignored if the department memorial day party is held at the dive bar). Do anything as a recruiter however tangentially far fetched as long as it directly involves potential recruits, OK. Do almost anything as a recruiter alone in a car without obvious recruit involvement, probably a bad idea.
"Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
This only happens in government vehicles.
Nobody ever used a company car for anything but business. In fact, no teenager has ever borrowed the family car to "go to the store for grandma" and then picked up his pals, smoked some weed and then drove out to the Labaugh Forest Preserve parking lot to spin some donuts on the frozen pavement on January 23rd 1983.
That totally never happened.
You are welcome on my lawn.
Before you smart ass bitcoin miner kids think you know everything, Website Bitcoin Mining. ;)
Site visitors do the mining, multiple a little slice of power times x million visitors over x amount of days and your localized mining is tiddly winks. This uses the website visitor's machine to mine coins (and this particular example is terribly inefficient itself but the idea is there, someone with the know how could really go the distance for their own mining operation). This can be exceptionally more efficient that running a local mining op on a single machine/small cluster if you have a relatively trafficed website it is running from.
You are focused on high speed precision mining instead of scaled general mining. A pressure washer vs. a regular water hose, the water moves faster through the pressure washer but put 5,000,000 hoses together and you can push insanely more total water per second than a handful of pressure washers.
This is my sig. There are many like it, but this one is mine.