SueAnne443
Literotica Guru
- Joined
- Oct 28, 2016
- Posts
- 849
is there a keystroke tracker employers could use to know what employees are typing online?
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
is there a keystroke tracker employers could use to know what employees are typing online?
pros play on ESDF or even further towards the right.
OK, let me clarify.Pros, really? None I know play anything but wasd, but hey, whatever floats your boat.
Da Fuq are these guys talking about?!
OK, let me clarify.
WASD - shooters (although ESDF happens here too)
ESDF - everything else, like MMO, where you need a lot of shortcuts available.
Da Fuq are these guys talking about?!
pleasuring themselves with their hand movements - Well?
is there a keystroke tracker employers could use to know what employees are typing online?
Get an Android tablet and the LIT app. Load 11 stories at a time into the app. Read offline. Nobody knows.It's easier (but less fun) to just not do it on your work computer.
is there a keystroke tracker employers could use to know what employees are typing online?
The simple answer is YES.
They come in several varieties, software and hardware.
Hardware can be something as inconspicuous as a little dongle, or connector, plugged inline between the keyboard and the CPU or plugged into an unused USB port.
In a network environment, employers can employee both hardware and software to monitor just about everything you do so you should never assume that anything you do is "private" or that you are entitled to any "reasonable assumption of privacy." Many employment contracts or employee IT agreements will explicitly state such.
In general its never safe, and indeed a very quick way to get fired watching porn or going to sex chat sites.
The only way you can safely play at work it to have a Virtual Private Network of your own. Most employers will not let install your own software.
Do not use the company WiFi, even the public, unsecured WiFi without a VPN and then be careful. Some programs will get out ahead of the VPN re connection and then what you are doing is visible. Your IT department can figure out who is an employee and who is not based on traffic and which WiFi antenna's you access.
Take care,
VPN is useful for protection against "man in the middle" attacks (e.g. dodgy hotel internet connection) but it won't do you much good against a keystroke logger.
Or any spyware on your company computer.
What about Sandboxie as an answer to spyware and keyloggers? I'm thinking no.