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I am trying to access my 8GB USB drive at work, but it gives an error that says "access is denied", I know that they have resticted access at work. Is there anyway I can break into this from my local machine? weird thing is that my account is under the administrators group. Any suggestions?

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    Mustafa, welcome to Superuser. Questions regarding circumvention of IT policy are usually not well received.
    – hyperslug
    Oct 11, 2009 at 9:05
  • thank you.. yeah, I know that of course. I thought I would give it a shot.
    – Mustafa A. Jabbar
    Oct 11, 2009 at 9:16
  • If your employer is so restrictive, there may be a good chance they would be monitoring any circmuvention attempts, including posts like the one you just made.
    – simon
    Oct 11, 2009 at 9:20
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    You could post a question at Serverfault, serverfault.com, asking "If I needed to set up a policy to deny users external USB drive access, how would I do it?" and throw out some questions like "is it foolproof?" or "can they get around it?".
    – hyperslug
    Oct 11, 2009 at 9:52
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    @hyperslug - so, what you're saying, we support questions that deal with practically the same thing, but mind how they are asked. One answer will result in bashing, the other in responses ...
    – Rook
    Oct 11, 2009 at 13:59

2 Answers 2

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I doubt the site owners want us to help you hack your employers systems. In short, the restrictions are there for a reason. Contact your internal support people or follow the rules.

Reasons that you might be restricted:

  1. IT doesn't have enough time to verify everyone's storage device isn't infected with viruses.
  2. Management is concerned with data theft - either by potentially disgruntled employees or the cleaning people/strangers who walk around your office and could find an open, logged on computer to sit in front of and attach a drive to either steal data or infect the network with malware.
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    I know these reason Multiverse, and I can see that you're an IT guy that respects the rules; however, I have been working here since long, and it is seriously getting boring with those restrictions, especially when you're free and you wanna kill some boredom. Even all webmails are resticted, flash is restricted, sending out attachments is restricted, facebook and myspace too, and everything that has to do with fun. Have some sympathy people –
    – Mustafa A. Jabbar
    Oct 11, 2009 at 9:13
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Well my enterprise follows the same. But there is an official escape to this. In my enterprise we have to contact the administrator and convince him for the data transfer. Yes it requires an official permission to do so but a genuine reason will not restrict him to transfer the data.

I will not suggest you to break your computer to transfer your stuff, if something goes wrong you have to pay huge price for maybe insignificant data which you have transfered.

Try to convince the admin and setup some kind of authorized stations from where you can transfer you data in or out.