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| Subject: | RE: International Computer/Security Policies |
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| Date: | Thu, 21 Apr 2005 09:09:36 +0700 |
Living in Thailand I can tell you a few things to look out for in China... most software is a pirate version. Zombie PC networks are rampant. People who can't speak English that well are a lot more inclined to click "OK" just to get to the next step. I find networks to be worse at the workplace than internet cafes actually. Check out what voltage electricity runs on in each country too. You will need adaptors or you will fry your computer. I recharged an electric razor from the States here once on their 240v and the thing ran like it was using jet fuel for a couple of days and never worked again. Lol. -----Original Message----- From: Alexander Bolante [mailto:alexander.bolante@gmail.com] Sent: Wednesday, April 20, 2005 1:26 PM To: security-basics@securityfocus.com Subject: International Computer/Security Policies Hi, I will be traveling to the following international sites this year on business: 1. United Kingdom (London/Camberley) 2. The Netherlands (Amsterdam/Haarlem) 3. China (Shanghai) 4. Australia (Perth) What should I be aware of in terms of international computer security policies for each country? What should I know regarding each country's network/Internet use policies? These are very broad, open-ended questions, so I'm open to any and all suggestions/recommendations/tips. My goal is to be well-prepared and aware of any gotchas before doing any type of computer work overseas. I'd appreciate any information you can provide... e.g. Does the Netherlands have restrictions on where I can use my machine, access the Internet, etc.? e.g. I heard when traveling to China, when your machine goes thru airport scanners, they care more about the data on the machine; hence to be safe, it's better to Fedex your machine to the local office where you'd be working. Thanks! -- "I know nothing" -- Alexander.Bolante@gmail.com
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