Selfhosted
A place to share alternatives to popular online services that can be self-hosted without giving up privacy or locking you into a service you don't control.
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Only do work on work devices. This is a quick way to lose a job. Always assume the company sees everything that's happening on their device. No way around it, and any attempt to get around it will raise the alarm. Just do the music/podcasts/etc... on another device. Why "need to be able to run it on their work PC"?
Oh yeah id never try to circumvent it, thats dumb. Im good friends with all the IT guys and I help them with certain issues sometimes (a lot of them follow the IT rules but arent really tech people if that makes sense)
But if I can have a solution that we just access on our nas via web browser, that'd be fine.
As an IT admin, I can confirm that we are everything.
Don't mess with IT, they can make your job even more difficult
What kind of dystopia are you living in that listening to music or podcasts would 'raise the alarm'? Yes, don't do anything inappropriate (definitely no piracy, obviously), or detrimental to productivity, but listening to music? Would definitely quit if an employer had a problem with that.
Is this a thing that's considered 'normal' in the US? (I'm assuming US mainly because other countries are not generally so hostile towards employees)
I don't think the issue is listening to music, but installing potentially dodgy software that could bring a virus into the corporate network. Hence most businesses handling sensitive information try to protect their systems and networks by preventing unauthorised installation of software.
Don't worry, we are all on win 11, its already a virus xD I cant stand it.
i hate using it to, but only because i am comfortable with the freedom linux provides. the majority of people using a windows machine would melt at the first sight of trying to use linux and have no motivation or inclination to learn or use it, and why should they? if windows is a sufficient tool for their use case, then good. the os is just a tool to interact with the machine, and as long as the user gets what they want out of it, then the tool is correct.
The issue is not listening to music, the issue is trying to circumvent company IT policy to install software they're not allowed to install, e.g. spottube. So, if they want to use something like that, they need to do so on their own devices.
It's not a matter of hostility to employees, but it does have to do with liability and some people don't know where the boundaries are. It's usually a small minority screwing it up for everybody else.
The company owns legal liability for anything you so on their hardware.
The end.