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unless you are not friends with the computer guy, then it is a quick lesson in criminal law, firsthand, by way of a felony charge.
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OK, and what about the kid that just enters the password taped to the back of the machine, not knowing what account it is for, thinking its the temp login password for his account or something? Of course, this is akin to leaving the keys ontop of you're car..if someone comes along and uses it, it is still a crime, even though the keys were left out... |
The kid that uses the password will get farther in life than the one who doesn't - of course, I am an anarchist.
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I only said that, because the reports I read, they are being charged with felonies.
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This poses a question:
What about Spyware? I worked on my school's computer systems for years, and the big problem we had my junior/senior year, was kids that were accidently installing spyware (clicking Yes to those nasty Java dialog boxes in FireFox). So, in theory, if a student installs spyware by a company, couldn't the school/law pin it on the unknowing student? |
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Nothing like a little personal responsibility. "They ddin't stop us from breaking the rules, it's the administration's fault!"
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Besides, I'm still unclear how this violation of computer use policy become a felony? Are the laws written that broadly? Can my company charge me with a felony if I download a chat program against company policy? And what's this about no letting them refuse the computer - there's a great civil disobediance action in that - just let the batteries die. |
if you were in pennsalvania(sp), yeah, I suppose it could be a felony.
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