Daten Verfolgung vom LAN Kabel möglich?
Hallo um es kurz zu halten wäre meine Frage eine rein hypothetische die durch eine Diskussion mit ein paar Mitarbeitern erschien: Wenn ich sagen wir mal meine PS5 mit in die Arbeit nehme um zu zocken, das LAN Kabel der Arbeit verwende um dann vielleicht online zu spielen oder ein Update herunterzuladen, kann das die IT Abteilung sehen oder sozusagen herausfinden?
In a good IT environment nothing runs without authentication.
If you connect your PS5, it will not be left to the net at all, as it is not authenticated, and then directly excluded. You won’t get any Connect or IP address or anything else.
Basically yes, the DHCP creates a log file when it has an IP address Geleast.
In addition, there will be a proxy that holds in a log file which device connects to which server.
And if the IT department really pays attention to IT security (in the positive sense), then when connecting a monitoring system will let you know and your PS5 will be excluded from the network.
Apart from that, you will first have to take a device from your employer’s network, which should simply be stuck to a free LAN-dose should not be as easy as possible. Ideally, only the cans are patched which are also required.
Thank you for this detailed answer, appreciate your effort and the invested time!
The IT department can in any case see the target of the request (the IP of the servers) and, if a separate DNS resolver hangs in between, also the DNS requests. Ports may also be locked and connection attempts may be logged
In a good environment, foreign devices don’t get into the network.
Of course, if this is a well-organized IT, it will be possible.
Yes, of course
If your employer is halfway competent in IT, you shouldn’t get into the network with the PS5, either to the LAN or to the Internet.
An unknown device should not get an IP in any company LAN at all.
That’s how it is, unknown devices land in a DMZ. As a rule, the guest WLAN is good for this;) (If it is not rusted)
If she monitors the router traffic, then yes.
Of course, and this is never a good idea without permission.