I ordered a data-logger for a work-related project, Which comes with windows software and need admin priviledge (that I don’t have due to corporate IT policies). So I lost 2h going to the IT department trying to get someone with admin right installing this driver :(

What’s the reason hardware come mostly with Windows driver (rather than Linux) and why do these software/driver need admin privilege for installation where their customer base are professional who often don’t have the right privilege on their PC ? Is there something technically forcing the privilege elevation to install a driver ?

  • Nollij@sopuli.xyz
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    7 hours ago

    Also, you asked 3 completely different and unrelated questions:

    1. Why do drivers need admin permissions?
    2. Why do devices only come with Windows drivers?
    3. Why are corporate IT policies the way they are?

    #3 could be broken down even further, covering how/when admin is granted, as well as how devices are procured.

    At my (large) employer, we absolutely would’ve told you to pound sand for getting that device outside of official channels and bypassing a security review. Especially since you described it as a data logger.

    • Hemingways_Shotgun@lemmy.ca
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      6 hours ago

      Why are corporate IT policies the way they are?

      I thought about this the other day when asking my IT department why they won’t let me carry a USB stick between home and work to be able to work from home and instead lock down the USB access and instruct me to use Google Drive instead…

      I decided that most corporations only cosplay their IT security inasmuch as it only matters up to and not beyond the point of economic convenience.

      If any of these companies truly cared about security, they would at the very least be using a hardened fork of Chrome with Google Services stripped out. They’d be self-hosting their own servers connected only via a VPN or some sort, etc… etc…

      But that shit takes money and staff to maintain it. So they’ll give everything to third parties to manage instead and then send out pop-quiz emails about phishing every couple of weeks followed by sternly worded emails when a person fails it.

      (Sorry…off my anti-depressants until pay day, so I have a lot of micro rants that have built up…haha)