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I think we've all been there, your IT Support/ Infrastructure team inflict some meaningless, very frustrating, poorly explained "policy" on you and your team that irks you every time you are affected.

My current fairly trivial issues are that the IT department have reverted to the old school Start Menu. I really didn't realise how much I used the new one until they took it away.

They have also reverted to the old school Windows 2000 grey look which is quite frankly just ugly! To add to that they have also imposed a rather unnecessarily short Screen Saver time of 5 minutes, very annoying if you're flicking between remote desktop sessions!

Non trivial, they are completely unwilling to enter into a debate about been allowed to use non company laptops over our VPN.

Anyway, I'm sure you've all had more frustrating issues than me...have you?

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38 Answers

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vote up 85 vote down

Not having administrative access to my own machine.

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Worth fighting to get this restriction removed. Luckily I'm a manager, so had some clout, but still took me a long time. If it's a help, ask for "local admin" access - that gives you full rights to your machine, but no network-wide access. Many IT departments confuse the two. – Greg Whitfield Mar 25 at 10:17
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vote up 63 vote down

Once upon a time, I was working as a data entry clerk. In order to do my job well, I set the refresh rate at 75 hertz and the resolution up to 1024/768 (a huge improvement over the 640/480 everyone else was using). The refresh rate allowed me to work for hours in comfort, and the resolution allowed me to do data entry without jockying a scollbar - needless to say, I was one of the best.

Other data entry clerks observed my success and the way in which I used the technology to achieve it. They started to fiddle with their screen settings. This was back when adjusting screen settings beyond the capabilities of the machine could leave you in a blackscreen "lockout".

I can understand IT's frustration that data entry clerks were "breaking" their machines. What I cannot understand is why they came to my machine (which never had a problem), and locked me in to 60 hertz and 640/480 resolution. I worked through the afternoon on these settings.

By the end of the day, I could see the flashing screen when I closed my eyes. I told my boss that I would not come in the next day and I went home and covered my face with a wash cloth. The flashing persisted for two hours.

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I'm up voting this up for the pure fact you were caused physical discomfort for two hours because of their stupidity. – MrEdmundo Feb 16 at 15:10
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Wow - just amazing. You'd think that they would do what they could to help others reach your level of productivity rather than screwing with your machine. That is one of the most aggressively stupid organizational stories I've ever heard. – Mark Brittingham Feb 16 at 15:23
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+1 - I held on to an older pair of 17" monitors purely because they could run at 100Hz, and the newer "better" monitors could only manage 75Hz. We had a problem with our building power supply which caused noticable screen "wobbling" which would give me a really bad headache by the end of the day. – Antony Scott Mar 18 at 10:18
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vote up 40 vote down

I once had corporate IT block Facebook while I was developing a Facebook application for the company.

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Scott Adams, is that you!?! ;) – HardCode Feb 16 at 17:51
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That is pure Gold. – railsninja Sep 27 at 9:45
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vote up 31 vote down

No Internet access.

(I feel I have to specify that this was at a previous job, not on my current one - which is why this is not posted from my Blackberry ;-)

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vote up 17 vote down

I like to listen to music while I code. It helps me concentrate.

Management stated one day that headphones were now banned as they're a "barrier to communication".

I complained to my manager, saying I found it hard to concentrate when I have to listen to the sales guys shouting on their phones.

My manager suggested I used earplugs to block out the background noise. I pointed out that they would also be a "barrier to communication".

He said he'd be happy for me to use earplugs, but not for me to use earphones.

I'm glad I don't work there any more.

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I had this exact same problem, but ours also came with the line "everybody" will want to do it! Well explain to everybody the reasons why most programmers like background noise drowned out! – MrEdmundo Feb 17 at 8:34
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Heh - yeah, I think they said the same to us. Our response was: so? Why not let them? – teedyay Feb 17 at 9:23
vote up 15 vote down

I've been at a couple of banks who don't allow physical access to your PC. This means that if it blue screens you have to call the help desk to reboot it for you. This is bad enough but to add insult to injury the phone directory is online.

Bonus answer: the last place that had this policy also didn't allow FTP access. My job was to install my companies software. I couldn't bring in a CD (see above) and I couldn't download from our support site. They paid me to sit and twiddle my thumbs for two days while their IT department tried to reconfigure their firewall.

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+1 (wish I could upvote more!) I'm sitting at work doing nothing because they're trying to figure out how I can move files to linux machines that aren't allowed to touch the network... using an encrypted flash drive that only supports windows! – Neil Williams May 19 at 19:43
vote up 12 vote down

Each individual restriction put on me didn't seem too bad, but all the restrictions put together really annoyed me.

  • Internet Explorer 7 (I prefer Firefox) was configured to not allow tabs.
  • The taskbar could not be right-clicked.
  • I could not view C:\
  • They had installed some Internet filtration software
  • 800x600 monitors
  • Flash drives could not be used (less of a restriction and more of a bug, but there was never an attempt to solve this bug).

It still brings a chill down my spine.

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800x600 in IE7 times? Holy crap! – Blorgbeard Mar 18 at 9:41
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vote up 12 vote down

Couldn't browse hacking/flashgames/community sites. And these are subjects we had use of in our work.

Developers went crazy over this and we got the useless Websense software removed.

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vote up 9 vote down

No admin access to my machine. I have full access to millions of credit card numbers, private customer information, a keystroke could shut down our multi-million dollar company and they are worried about me turning off the screen saver.

Maybe the biggest WTF is I'm the primary 'go to' person for the network admin team when problems creep up they cannot fix (which they give me 'temporary' admin access to fix the problem).

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vote up 8 vote down

Overly aggressive anti-virus scanning.

Not only did they scan all DLLs & JARs (sqldeveloper took about 3 minutes to start up) but they also scanned vhd's (virtual hard drives) which was really stupid because the corp. requirement was to also have the anti-virus install in the VM to start with.

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the virus scanner at my company more than doubles the build time. All the developers have hacked the on-access scan to death so now we're free, but don't tell IT. – rmeador Feb 16 at 16:18
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They've locked it down to the point where the only solution is to boot linux & rename the executables. – chris Feb 16 at 17:46
vote up 8 vote down

Disabling the right mouse button! Honestly.

This was a very large car company with about 20 people in IT support.

However, they didn't disable the context menu key. So getting to menus was still possible but a pain in the ass.

I hope they feel satisfied knowing that the "huge security whole" (their words) created by the right button has finally been solved...

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vote up 6 vote down

They put up a proxy that blocks all streaming video.

I am managing an offshore team and much of our communication is with recording quick screencasts using Jing and uploading to screencast.com

The results: I can record and post my screencast, but I can't view what I just recorded.

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vote up 5 vote down

Lotus Notes

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vote up 3 vote down

No admin access! I have to use my VMware machine for everything!

Cant download any exe, dll or scripts :(

Cant use Twitter

No video streaming

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vote up 3 vote down

There was a company that tried its best to kill developer productivity by:

  • No VPN except from company laptops, but they are hard to get.
  • Otherwise, remote access only through Citrix Metaframe.
  • But Citrix copy-paste breaks sometime after 20 or 30 pastes and refuses to work again for the rest of the day.
  • Citrix logs you out after a few minutes and you have to go through two logons to get back on.
  • Citrix doesn't understand dual displays, it won't let you use the second one.
  • Access to servers has to be done through Remote Desktop running from Citrix, but the servers' screen saver is set to lock up after a few minutes also.
  • Servers kill all remote desktop sessions sometime during the night so you can't leave anything running overnight.
  • Forced to change passwords regularly even if your password is strong.
  • Developer desktops don't have CD/DVD drives.
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vote up 3 vote down

Dumb firewall rule that only allowed HTTP to destination port 80, so any server running HTTP on a non-standard port (e.g. PGP key servers) would be dropped.

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vote up 3 vote down

The randomness of sites blocked. Way back when I tried to download an FAQ on writing VXD's and the site was blocked for sexual content. Recently I wanted to get an update for a Hex editor and was blocked for hacking.

The rules that are applied to e-mail. I had to research why some e-mail wasn't received at our site and I found out that a research article on how radiation affects the human body (I work at a nuclear power plant) was blocked because it contained the word "breast" too many times.

I have to use VPN to work from offsite but they don't allow printing to a local network printer, so I can't print when I'm connected (split tunneling would allow that to work).

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  1. We can only print in Black and White, not colour.
  2. The Company provided screensaver does not work just throws an error everytime it runs

The only web sites we have access to are:

  • Intercountry company website
  • Whereis.com yellowpages.com
  • rta.nsw.gov.au
  • jobs.nsw.gov.au
  • bom.gov.au

    So we can look up people's business'/personal address/number, find the way to places, check the traffic and find a government job?

    Strange how we can look on the government job search site at a non-government job

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    vote up 3 vote down

    What about your sysadm removing write permission to /tmp ???

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    vote up 2 vote down

    At my Scottish secondary school:

    • Being forced to use IE6.
    • Not letting you use the Address Bar in IE or Windows Explorer!
    • Forcing every folder in Explorer to open in a new window
    • Half-trying to organise the Start Menu, but failing completely
    • Being restricted to Visua Basic 6 Learning Edition for programming. Even in Standard Grade/Higher Computing.
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    vote up 1 vote down

    I would say blocking access to development Wikis, forums and blogs when tasked with learning something new or you have a development question. Kinda hard to ask the other developers when I am the only one that knows the technology. Thankfully they haven't blocked Stack Overflow... yet.

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    Once, when I was a student, our sys-admin disabled "ps" command on our unix mainframes because "you can use to spy other users" (his words).

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    Over agressive firewall virus scanning software that rewrote Java jar files on the fly as they were downloaded with constant "Are you sure you want to do that?" dialogs. Kinda makes sense for browser Java applet security, but is a huge pain when applied to everything downloaded by maven on the continuous integration server, which is used to build the web site deployable artifacts.

    Constantly getting callouts from IT ops because some web server process hung in the middle of the night because no one was there to click the "OK continue" dialog button to allow some thread to continue whenever it tried to access the file system or access a system environment property

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    vote up 0 vote down

    10 minutes screensaver start, with user unable to change this. To put it mildly, users complained a lot and it was finally changed. Or at the beginning, a default wallpaper was set and users could not possible change it either. IT depts a refull of "interesting" policies these days.

    Oh I forgot forcing mac users to have an anti-virus, just to be able to protect windows PC from themselves.

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    Mac's have virus's also. Scanning for known virus's in e-mail attachments shouldn't be limited to the OS that the scan is run on. – bruceatk Feb 16 at 20:08
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    vote up 0 vote down

    Considering how I'm still a student, the worst thing the school's IT department did to me was either:
    A) Sticking with a Mac-only system, which was extremely easy for them to lock down (the applications whitelist didn't include Terminal, but they -cough- fortunately -cough- left me with TextEdit) or...
    B) Setting up a firewall that blocked almost everything on Earth. Programming forums and blogs are blocked. Wikimedia is blocked. The bright side is that all ads are blocked. The bad news to the bright side is that each element that's blocked is replaced by a really ugly, generic image.

    To sum it all up, I guess one should never expect to get any real work done in a high school computer environment.

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    vote up 0 vote down

    Filtering traffic from Amazon's S3 service, so every now and then, content would be missing in websites... for example all avatars on Twitter.

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    vote up 0 vote down

    After viruses started creeping in on our client's corporate network, it was decreed that no USB mass storage devices (i.e. flash drives) would be allowed. You can plug a flash drive into the USB port, but it never becomes visible to Windows. And instead of using Group Policy to set this, they used Sophos (yes, it has such an option).

    I'll leave you to consider the implications for the IT contractors (me) who have to transfer code between this client and our head office. And in case you were wondering, any email attachments sent in an archive (even .tar) are silently nuked. So theoretically, the only way to transfer code is to bring along a laptop... which then has to be vetted by the IT department... they then have to make a network point available (since all of them are locked down unless in use) and allow you through the firewall.

    This would have been a problem, except that for some reason the Sophos blocking is flaky... some computers happily accept any flash drive, others refuse all of them, and others allow drives from one manufacturer but not another. It's a WTF of note.

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    Not being allowed to (officially) use Java 1.6 without going through a byzantine internal approval process (and even then not being allowed to use it in production because it's still "under evaluation").

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    Supporting web-based email, but only if we're on the company intranet.

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    vote up 0 vote down

    How about a small private university that determined that any applications developed by the one in-house developer (me) would have no support from the desktop support area because they were not part of the application development process. I had to continue development project and provide all support for applications used by every student in the university.

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