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| Subject: | RE: Web filters - Effects on Productivity |
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| Date: | Tue, 22 Apr 2008 08:49:56 +1000 |
There was a good story that got on slashdot yesterday about the Chicago School of Law and professors having similar concerns to you: http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2008/04/18/laptops I think that people who want to waste time, will. And sometimes, those who stay longer hours waste time just as much as anyone else. Perhaps there's a metric for how productive people actually are when they are not distracted. It's just that the net gives such an easy opportunity to be distracted. When I was at school, being distracted meant day-dreaming about any number of things(making up stories about super heroes etc) I had a vast world at my neuron-tips...people now have a vast world at their fingertips. It's a shame that they/we only visit .02% of it looking for gossip and downloading 'free' games or stupid jokes. Or pr0n. Personally, I couldn't do my job quite as efficiently if I couldn't surf relatively freely.
-----Original Message----- From: listbounce@securityfocus.com [mailto:listbounce@securityfocus.com] On Behalf Of Noah Sent: Sunday, April 20, 2008 12:58 PM To: security basics Subject: Web filters - Effects on Productivity I'm currently researching web filtering. While my job is not to play Internet Police with those whom I work, I do find it interesting that even though my company has a seemingly draconian Internet Access Policy, people still seem to waste plenty of time on the Internet. I, for one, am not exempt from this statement. My thoughts are that Web Filtering means different things to different people. HR believes that blocking sites such as CareerBuilder, Monster and LinkedIn keeps employees from sniffing out better jobs on company time. Desktop support believes it decreases the number of avenues for a widespread virus outbreak. Managers believe it keeps employees from wasting time in chat and on social networking sites. At the end of the day, I'm not sure how effective the productivity piece really is. If users can't access Facebook many settle for wasting an hour on the "letters to the editor" section of the local newspaper's website. As for the blogs I read (many security-related blogs are hosted on Blogger or Wordpress, which are blocked), I simply add them to Google Reader, which I can access. I read them anyways, at least they're related to my job. I'm not bringing into question the technical security benefits of web filtering; those are obvious. Do web filters in schools and offices *really* give productivity a boost, or do they simply shift what sites or activities employees waste company time on? Have there been any solid studies on this topic? --Noah
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