There has to be some IT admin here, if I sign up for something like ovpn.se and use it at work...

There has to be some IT admin here, if I sign up for something like ovpn.se and use it at work, IT people wouldn't be able to detect what I'm browsing at work, right? But will they get suspicious that there's some unrecognized VPN connection on my work PC? Any other way to hide my internet activity at work?

i like this picture

>will they get suspicious
>will they get suspicious

Yes, you dipshit. Do you seriously think you're the first to have thought of this?

>Any other way to hide my internet activity at work?

Do your job.

>Do you seriously think you're the first to have thought of this?
I didn't say that, I was asking if it works.
>Do your job.
I am, don't worry about that. Just wanna do some business on the side.

Well think of it this way. Treat every packet of data you are sending and receiving as if you were shipping an item through the mail. Now you could make it random by going to a neighbors place or leaving out a return address which would prevent anyone from knowing exactly where the package came from but it still goes to the same mail distribution center. It's still got the label from what ever service you used (think like UPS or USPS) and it's still going somewhere that can be traced. And with technology these companies will know exactly what's in the package.
Of course receiving a package is a little more complicated to explain with this analogy. With a VPN, yes what you do may be more "secure" but that is only up to a point. Because anyone monitoring the router or in your ISP will know exactly what you are doing.

>connect to your home pc via RDP
>browse on your home pc

my guess is that what you do would have to be encrypted as fk. But there are always points of vulnerability.

Source: i'm a tremendous faggot.

nice thanks user, how about this idea?

sounds good actually. but is it open to eavesdropping by IT?

Just use 4g on your phone. Fucking duh.

Yes idiot, they will. Once you're networked, everything, and I mean EVERYTHING you do is monitored. And vpn, if your sysadmin is competent, is strictly forbidden.

source:I'm IT admin

not just browsing user, need to run some stuff/download/upload etc.

IT admin fag here.
Depends on whether your IT guys use remote software that lets them view what you're doing at any time. We have one installed on every machine, but it ultimately depends on the setup in your workplace
I would imagine so though.

ok, thanks. How about
?

I think the remote idea is good theoretically. All IT should see is that you were streaming data to/from some source. Seeing as whatever you do will be from a distance they won't be able to tell that you are masturbating to all that gay porn on xtube.

Your ISP still knows you like extreme anal insertions though. kek

I'll also mention that you haven't even specified how large your company is or where you're located. Some companies I've worked for have next to no monitoring whereas others constantly record your every click.

>lets them view what you're doing at any time
yeah they have this but I doubt they'll constantly monitor what I'm doing. They would think it's work anyway even if they saw it.

>next to no monitoring whereas others constantly record your every click
just somewhere in between

Problem is you probably browse from work through a filtering system (like proxy). These nasty little things work by blocking categories of website (porn, vpn, social media). If your admins do the job, everything you want to try (direct remote desktop, known vpn providers, dyndns, personnal storage,...) would be blocked.

social media, youtube etc aren't blocked, I doubt they'd block VPN providers but they might have a block on remote desktop

They are in my company. For 2000 people you had 20% on it 24/7, like fuck everything

actually my employer provided me with my own free network that is not monitored by the IT department.

yeah we have a lot of people on facebook/youtube, when you approach their desks browser gets minimized

how'd you manage that?

any other opinions on this? is it traceable by IT? Can they see what's being sent/received?

last bump

Really something wrong with the company if thats the case. Can't really blame the people for it.