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View Full Version : Ways to block teacher control/watching on School computers?


__Michael__
February 10th, 2005, 10:55 PM
On school computers, you know how the teachers can take over your screen, or watch what you're doing? I see a lot of people are blocking that somehow. How do you do it? :) I'd really appreciate some info on it! :D

Chrono
February 11th, 2005, 12:07 AM
Well, in our school, playing games violate the internet rules so he might just wanna do that :lol:

<-Dying_to_Live->
February 11th, 2005, 02:16 AM
In my school, the teachers use a program called "Vision", and it sounds just like how you described it. There is one sure fire way to beat it, and that is to unplug ur ethernet cable.

__Michael__
February 11th, 2005, 08:12 AM
Ack, no, porn is scary! And I could get in BIG trouble for having it on a school computer XD Just wondering in case I need to get on AIM or e-mail or something! :wink:

Kiros
February 11th, 2005, 09:20 PM
ok, well most likely, the internet for the school is on a NETWORK, so dont unplug the ethernet cable!!! u will lose the internet access then lol at my school, i dont have any trouble with that, no one can take over our screens or even watch over them. They only walk around to see if everything is good. But I have a personal login screen name and all you have to do is make yourself an administrator and then this 'program' probably wont watch over u anymore! OK, first things first.. The school has a proxy server with a login program. Use the SOCK 4 access with a screen name that u know can log onto it. Then do as such and access the server's control.exe and go to the user accounts. look up your school and the network logon path, then your specific user name. Change the account type to Administrator. Thats it, problem solved :)

(I probably over did it, didn't I...) lol

__Michael__
February 11th, 2005, 10:00 PM
:P ok, thanks for the info! ;) It might be trouble getting onto an account that can change peoples' status though! :P Don't really know any teacher's.

<-Dying_to_Live->
February 12th, 2005, 01:30 AM
well assuming that u can't change your student account into an administrator account (which is 100% of the time so long as your IT guys are not idiots), you should either survive without ur internet, or better yet delete the program files and restart your computer and the program will fail

Kiros
February 12th, 2005, 05:40 PM
that wouldnt work cosmos, if u know anything about programs that monitor, then ud know that its the start up is either a service, hiden, or in the gp's database script - which you need to be an admin to even access any of them. And no, they dont have to be idiots, it ALWAYS works if u can jus get into one of the teachers accounts. They always have administrative rights.

<-Dying_to_Live->
February 14th, 2005, 07:34 PM
wow, that is assuming you know how the global policies for my school district are configured, which you DONT. teachers can't mod the network structure or create universal user accounts, retard. any competent school would be set up as such

Blahages
February 14th, 2005, 10:20 PM
My School uses WinVNC to Monitor us. With ours, you can right click and close the program in the system tray, but while that looks like it closes the program, it really doesn't.

Of course, my teachers are too lazy to monitor us. So, you can basically do anything anyway.

I have no idea what rights any teachers at my school have. I know they don't have Administrator Access, and I'm sure most of them don't even have access to the monitoring program. And, like was said above, with the part about logging into an account which has access to the rights. You're just saying to do that. It's not like everyone knows teachers and Administrator's passwords.

At my school, they don't give you rights to anything. You can access the server, but you cannot modify anything. It's funny though. They don't allow you to type the Address, like \\server or whatever, but if you make a link to it, you can access it.

Their computers came with XP Pro, but they stupidly downgraded to Win2k.

Just for the heck of it, here's a screenshot of the schools computers:

http://mei.net/~farnhambi/Gov/School.jpg

Blahages
February 14th, 2005, 10:59 PM
How did you get a screen shot of your schools computer? :?

I hit the printscreen button on the keyboard when I was at school last week, pasted it into Microsoft's Paint, and uploaded it to the internet.

Then, I just posted it. Same way you take a screenshot on your home computer.

Blahages
February 14th, 2005, 11:04 PM
Oh okay :D I thought you were at school right now or something.

Ha. Nah, I wouldn't even think about being at school at 11PM. :) I didn't even have school today, so that makes it even less likely.

Blahages
February 14th, 2005, 11:14 PM
I had school today :x

My school decided to give us the rest of the Mondays in Feb. and the first monday in March off supposedly to save costs on heat and transportation, etc. Supposedly, it's it's going to save them $25,000.

<-Dying_to_Live->
February 14th, 2005, 11:51 PM
there are no global policies in schools that dont have there own server, and, most schools have teachers, and another, thats what these programs block!

all of the five schools in my district have windows 2000 active directory, which is a domain server. all 5 schools in my district are in an intranet via oc3. the only way to make yourself a global admin is to hack into the servers at the district office, of which no staff at my school have passwords. only the district technicians have access, so your full of crap and so is kiros

Blahages
February 15th, 2005, 04:31 PM
Allrighty well I don't know much about this stuff, I think they just have those blockers for a reason.

Yeah, they are in place for a reason. One main reason, especially for the internet blockers, is to protect them from getting in trouble for a kid either accidentally accessing some type of information that they either shouldn't be, or purposefully.

Although, sometimes, they do go overboard on certain things.

mrbean
February 15th, 2005, 06:40 PM
ask sprtsman604 for a simple way, I forgot what it was, but it's really easy

<-Dying_to_Live->
February 15th, 2005, 06:51 PM
Wait im confused. Are we talking about programs that spy on your computer usage, or programs that actually block something? I thought we were talking about the former

Blahages
February 15th, 2005, 08:35 PM
my school doesnt have porn blockers, because the person that uses the computer the period before my in computer class never clears his history

I'm confused. What does the person using the computer before you not clearing the history have anything to do with a reason not to have blockers?

My school has all this security crap installed. You cannot change anything in the WINNT or Program Files Directory, when you restart the computer, it is restored to a certain configuration, and any changes you made are lost, and several other things. They have EXE and ZIP files blocked on every site using the HTTP Protocol. FTP sites allow you to download things, but not HTTP.

I guess they decided to go crazy with Technology a year and a half ago when they ran into some money, and built a new school. They got all new computers and everything.

Blahages
February 15th, 2005, 09:04 PM
Well, I think he meant he looked at the history, and saw that people were looking at porn.

Oh. It's just worded strangely.

I thought all schools basically had to have those type of blockers now.

Well, I guess some don't. I just remembered one school around here that doesn't.

We didn't have a blocker like 4 years ago. Some kid got caught with porn on their computer after they left, in the Temp internet files dir. I guess that's when they decided to get a blocker.

<-Dying_to_Live->
February 16th, 2005, 03:20 AM
are you retarded, this is what these programs block!

Thats what confused me, it didnt make any sense. programs that spy on u dont block things

<-Dying_to_Live->
February 16th, 2005, 03:22 AM
Federal law requires any district that accepts eRate funding to filter internet access both for students and staff.

Most schools get this government funding, so in essence most schools have porn blockers

Underage_Thinker
February 16th, 2005, 05:26 PM
u go to the firwall setings and check the bock that says limit or prevent acsess from internet

Kiros
February 17th, 2005, 11:55 PM
gee, ya think? come on cosmos, get a grip. Yes the firewalls (or rather the proxy extensions) that block out sites and such do have to do the same for staff as they do for the student. But in EVERY school with this system, there is at least one master account that can make and manage other accounts. Get into that account and u can make another account or edit some other account to have full privelleges. Then you will be able to log into the proxy server's administration site and allow some ratings or special sites to be accessible to your county (parish for Louisiana) because ALL proxy servers that operate for schools are ran by counties, not cities (with the exception of metropolitans). With these sites accessible, u can then access control for the program that is monitoring your school's actions and disable it's service or even uninstall it (but you would have to disconnect the LAN lines when doing it so that any computers do not keep the process running. Once the program is uninstalled, reboot the proxy server and reconnect the LAN lines. (this process would take around 20 minutes if u can hurry). These programs that monitor only have one module that can access the remote logs, so once u have uninstalled the main modules, the others will not function as they are only remotely controlled by the main module.

now, u little disturbed boy - cosmos, read that carefully and try to understand little tid-bits of it... because I know that's all u would ever understand!

Blahages
February 19th, 2005, 11:21 PM
How, exactly were you advising someone to login to that all powerful account? At least where I go to school, they don't really have it all that easy to find out which account it is that manages the proxy server, and also, you wouldn't know the password. Now, if you were able to crack the password, and get into the proxy, besides having to know a fair amount about how the proxy operated, so you could know where exactly you had to go to access the management for it, what happens when you said the Proxy server would have to be restarted? If the Proxy itself was the only thing restarted, it wouldn't be so bad. But, if you restarted the entire server, that would be pretty noticable.

But, anyway, that's beside the point. I don't know how well they monitor things at my school, but I do know, at least, at another local school which I work for, they do a pretty good job logging EVERYTHING that takes place throughout the day, and who did it. Irreguardless what account you used, they would still know that someone had tampered with the system, and could more then likely trace that tampering back to the exact computer you were using at the exact time it was done.

Knowing that, all they would have to do, is find out who was in that classroom, and whether or not the teacher or whoever may have been in that room knew who was at which computer, they do know who is supposed to be in which classroom at what time. Even if they didn't, they have cameras near every classroom, and in a few cases, one in a few computer rooms.

I know when someone got into a teachers account at the school I work for, that teacher had been given special rights to create and manage users. Now, that kid that got into the account made himself a new account with full privilages, and messed a lot of other students access rights. During the same basic time, the blocker on the proxy server had been either shutdown, or something, because it wasn't working anymore. Now, I don't think it was found that the student had anything to do with the blocker. But, that's beside the point. They have things monitored so well, that they easily found out who it was and expelled them.

Now, when we had to get the blocker back up and running, the proxys had to be unloaded. At least with their systems, you have to know a lot about how Novelll works. Or, at least how to unload services, which, I guess, isn't too bad, if you know what you're doing. But, it still in some cases, requires either having physical access to the server, or the access rights, and the correct program to remotely access the server.

As for my school, I don't know how they run anything in the schools network. All I do know is that they seem to be running Windows 2000 Server addition, and some login script. I forget what it's called, though. Our tech guy for my school probably isn't the smartest for operating networks though. ;)

It would be easy to gain access to the admin account on our local computers at school if they didn't have "Deep Freeze," if anyone knows what that is. It's a program that basically takes a snapshot of what data is on a drive, and when you restart the computer, it restores the computer back to that. Thus, any changes are gone. So, even providing that I do have a disk that allows you to change the Admin password for NT based systems, once you restart to login to windows, that is gone too.

Dontcha love those things? I haven't yet found a way to get rid of that program on NT. I can on 9x, but we don't use 9x.

EDIT: forgot to address this:

ALL proxy servers that operate for schools are ran by counties, not cities (with the exception of metropolitans).

I don't know for sure, but as far as I know, at least one of the schools I go to manages their own proxy from their own school. Not through any county things. They just have this T1 line that comes in, at the Admin building for the school, they have one central proxy server, which is dedicated, I believe, that filters out all the traffic, then, each individual school has two servers. One server is the basic file and authentication server, and the second acts mainly as a proxy server, and also will authenticate you. Then, each school's proxy server then ties back to that central proxy via T1 lines.

Ravenous
February 20th, 2005, 07:59 AM
Anybody know any proxy servers????

JunkBondTrader
February 20th, 2005, 12:51 PM
My old school didnt have theem because (apparently) someone was doing a report on breast cancer and the software blocked out any page with the work "breast." That might just be a rumour, though.

Chrono
February 20th, 2005, 01:24 PM
Anybody know any proxy servers????




linuxbrew.com and click on secure anonymous proxy

Sephiroth
February 21st, 2005, 11:32 AM
Being a hacker, and being 15 I one knew your pain. Ok this is what you do.

First, press ctrl alt delete and delete the program thats usually called sysmoniter.exe or techscreen.exe then simply make sure shes not going to realize your computer magically dissapeared or is not responding.

((There is a much better way of doing it, but you need to know alot about hacking/cracking and I highly doubt you do or else you would of done this already.)

Blahages
February 21st, 2005, 11:44 AM
First, press ctrl alt delete and delete the program thats usually called sysmoniter.exe or techscreen.exe then simply make sure shes not going to realize your computer magically dissapeared or is not responding.

Ha. My school has all that stuff disabled, so you cannot access the list of processes, let alone close them. Even if you could, I bet they have that stuff set to we don't have rights to end them.

My School's crazy. They disabled a lot of crap. Like the command prompt, and a lot of other things. Most of these things can be easily gotten past though.

Like, they went through the GPedit.msc program on Win2k, and basically disabled everything. They tried to make it so you couldn't access C:\ or type in any file paths. But, all you have to do is make a link to it, and you can do all this. However, you cannot write to the Windows or Program Files directory.

((There is a much better way of doing it, but you need to know alot about hacking/cracking and I highly doubt you do or else you would of done this already.)

Not if they didn't know about this other way.

Sephiroth
February 21st, 2005, 12:29 PM
No, they dont know this way. Because I developed it myself, I made the program myself and its undistributed. It allows you to bypass the internet security systems (like bess) by going through an undetected proxy server, and shows your computer as someone elses on there moniter =)

<-Dying_to_Live->
February 21st, 2005, 07:44 PM
Dude Blahages you're ultra leet!! thanks for indirectly sticking up for me against kiros, the idiot. your awsome.

kevin
February 21st, 2005, 07:46 PM
Dude Blahages you're ultra leet!! thanks for indirectly sticking up for me against kiros, the idiot. your awsome.

what the hell are you talking about, kiros is very intellegent. He knows more about computers and technology then you probly will ever acheive

Blahages
February 21st, 2005, 08:16 PM
Dude Blahages you're ultra leet!! thanks for indirectly sticking up for me against kiros, the idiot. your awsome.

All I was doing above was basically using what I know about my school, and another one which I work at, to counter his point. In many ways he was correct, but, at least in a few ways, for my school, at least, he wasn't. I mean, a lot of schools may do it different ways, but not all. As far as I know, Kiros wasn't nessicarily wrong in any place, that I know of. There are ways in which he is correct, but, not for every place.

what the hell are you talking about, kiros is very intellegent. He knows more about computers and technology then you probly will ever acheive

Come on. Let's be intellegent here. Everyone here has their points. And, a lot of them are valid. But, there's no need to be negative.

I'm not questioning anyone's intellegence here. From what I've seen posted, Kiros certainly knows what he's talking about. I was merely stating that in some cases, it doesn't always apply. But, in other cases, it certainly does. So, we're both right.

...Unless anyone can prove either of us otherwise.

Kiros
March 5th, 2005, 04:10 PM
wow blahages, thats amazing that a school has its own personal proxy server running T1!!! What did they get, like a $10,000 grant??? lol i guess it might be a private school. anyway it goes, the proxy is much more easily managed by using a county proxy so thats what all schools are based on (with the exception of those rich schools ¬.¬ )

aaaannyway, all proxys, servers, and just any protected computer has to have (as u call it) an 'all powerful account' to be able to even logon to it and operate. and cracking the passwords for proxys can be simply done by using pure brute force. and in some cases, the administrators are soooo stupid that they actually base it on a local SQL database (not hosted by anything but the server or proxy that its stored on) so anyone could gain full access by using a simple SQL injection LOL :lol:

Now, as for my school, we use Novel, and I know that they do not log every action, key stroke, and/or event that takes place. And besides, you could easily get around the loggin by using a remote login to the Global Administor account.
And for that Deep Freeze program, just direct connect to the proxy or server with it installed on it (after you gain the IP of course along with the ports accesible) and terminate processes currently running that look suspicious. then go into the drive where the partition with windows exists and permanently delete and *.sys files that look suspicious, and if youre not sure of it, then just open each one up in a text viewer to see if they support deep freeze in anyway. problem fixed.

Last but not least, it might cause minor alert to the school board, but having a server or a proxy restart is not uncommon when a critical error occurs, so a system error can take the blame for that. If you do restart the server, then make sure that it can connect with a DNS server upon boot, otherwise your screwed until you get it right :P lol I would also do this around 4 or 5 pm so its after school and not entirely complained about from all the schools within the district.

u seem pretty kool for noticing those details I left out, blahages! :D

BITE ME COSMOS! :x

(im cool, im cool... :P )

Blahages
March 6th, 2005, 01:47 AM
wow blahages, thats amazing that a school has its own personal proxy server running T1!!! What did they get, like a $10,000 grant??? lol i guess it might be a private school. anyway it goes, the proxy is much more easily managed by using a county proxy so thats what all schools are based on (with the exception of those rich schools ¬.¬ )

I don't know. I'm not sure if were both on the same page. The school has one central server which is called district-proxy, replacing district with the name of the school, which is at the Admin building. Then, all of the schools in the district run back to that building, and the Internet all feeds back to that proxy, which filters out all the crap. They do have each school with filters too, but the main one is there. And, I was told they have T1 lines connected to all the schools, so, they apparently have all of the schools interconnected by T1 lines in someway. I figured most schools had all of their schools networked together. That school's definately not rich. This summer we have to move all of the computer stuff to different schools from two of the schools, because they're closing their admin building, and moving it to one of the elementries, and closing that elementry down for good, and dispursing the kids throughout the district because of money issues. So....

Is that what you were talking about?

My school is all networked together too. I can access the printers/servers/computers, etc from my HS that are in the district. I don't know how their internet or anything is set up though, since they'd probably never tell me.

Now, as for my school, we use Novel, and I know that they do not log every action, key stroke, and/or event that takes place. And besides, you could easily get around the loggin by using a remote login to the Global Administor account.

You mean, like using a remote console program, or whatever, like Freecon (I think) and sit at one computer, and log on to the remote server? If so, that's what they use where I work. I'm not sure what they use to authorize the access to that though.

And, I'm sure they have some type of password on it. You always seem to make it sound like (in many of the posts I've read about this here) the admin accounts are just passwordless accounts, that you can really easily log into.

And for that Deep Freeze program, just direct connect to the proxy or server with it installed on it (after you gain the IP of course along with the ports accesible) and terminate processes currently running that look suspicious. then go into the drive where the partition with windows exists and permanently delete and *.sys files that look suspicious, and if youre not sure of it, then just open each one up in a text viewer to see if they support deep freeze in anyway. problem fixed.

What exactly do you mean? Are you saying terminate the program on the Server or the local computer? Because, the program is run locally, through both services and programs. And I think they have something on the servers, but that's not what they use to keep them frozen.

And, you can't terminate a lot of the processes on the computers there. Get access denied on most. And, even if I could, I could sit there all day long terminating processes, and it wouldn't remove the protection on it. That's not how it works. Believe me, I tried it the other day that I installed a trial version of it on. If I remember correctly, it doesn't allow even the admin to terminate the process without using a password to disable it.

Have you been around that program? Here's a like if you want to take a look at it. (http://www.faronics.com/). Try downloading the Trial version of the Standard program. That's here: http://www.faronics.com/html/download.asp?software=1 if you have an extra computer you want to try it on. Once you have it installed, and the password enabled, try to disable/remove the program once it's enabled, without using the password. It's pretty difficult. Even if it looks gone, you restart, and any change will be restored to what was there before.

I mean, I know there are ways around it, but it's pretty hard. The only reason I can get around the 9x version is because I was able to get ahold of a program which removes it. But, you cant find that anywhere online.

Last but not least, it might cause minor alert to the school board, but having a server or a proxy restart is not uncommon when a critical error occurs, so a system error can take the blame for that. If you do restart the server, then make sure that it can connect with a DNS server upon boot, otherwise your screwed until you get it right :P lol I would also do this around 4 or 5 pm so its after school and not entirely complained about from all the schools within the district.

Yeah, unless they log that too, which they probably do. Stupid school Admins. I bet you could do it easily at my school though. :)

Around 4-5pm? From school? It'd be kind of suspicious being there. Especially since everyone is gone after around 2:40-3PM, besides some teachers or staff.

When I go to school Tuesday (have Monday off) I'm taking a little program that allows you to end processes. I'll see what's running on the computers, since I can't access the task manager they have in the first place. But, I doubt I'd be able to end any of them, besides the ones I started. I still gotta mess with that program I have which removes that freezing program from 9x and see if it works with NT based versions. I know it wont with NTFS partitions, but it MAY with Fat32. I don't know. I would have tried messing with the stuff more so, if I knew exactly how they run their networks. I don't know anything about how they monitor anything at my school. Only where I work. So, I have browsed around on the server a few times, and you can see where their login scripts and stuff are, but I haven't done much else. I don't know how they'd respond if they caught someone doing anything. They gave me and my friend an hour after school detention once, in 10th grade, for just sending a message via "Winpopup" over the entire network. I didn't even do it. I was just talking to my friend about it, and showed him how to use it, but didn't actually do anything. I even warned him not to send anything. But, he typed like "fndsjfhs" and hit send, and it said something similar to:

"Message receieved at 2:30PM March 5, 2005 from User '<Insert Name>'"

"Message: fndsjfhs"

So, it told everyone who sent it, and everything. Then, of course, they asked him about it, and he mentioned my name, and even though they knew i didn't do anything, I still got the same punishment, because you're not supposed to even open a program that isnt either authorized to use by the school, or isn't school related.

Stupid school policy. That didn't go on my record, but still. It would have if it was something worse or a second offense.

Kiros
March 6th, 2005, 10:12 PM
I don't know. I'm not sure if were both on the same page. The school has one central server which is called district-proxy, replacing district with the name of the school, which is at the Admin building. Then, all of the schools in the district run back to that building, and the Internet all feeds back to that proxy, which filters out all the crap. They do have each school with filters too, but the main one is there. And, I was told they have T1 lines connected to all the schools, so, they apparently have all of the schools interconnected by T1 lines in someway. I figured most schools had all of their schools networked together. That school's definately not rich. This summer we have to move all of the computer stuff to different schools from two of the schools, because they're closing their admin building, and moving it to one of the elementries, and closing that elementry down for good, and dispursing the kids throughout the district because of money issues. So....

Is that what you were talking about?

yes lol


You mean, like using a remote console program, or whatever, like Freecon (I think) and sit at one computer, and log on to the remote server? If so, that's what they use where I work. I'm not sure what they use to authorize the access to that though.

And, I'm sure they have some type of password on it. You always seem to make it sound like (in many of the posts I've read about this here) the admin accounts are just passwordless accounts, that you can really easily log into.

Simply using any remote connector (even the one that windows comes with) will allow u to connect with the computer if u enter the proxy, domain, computer, IP, port, and user name & password correctly.

~~ O.o ummm no, usually all admins have passwords, but if its on an SQL database, then ya dont need the password or even the user name to gain full access to it and anyother server's passwords can either be guessed or brute forced.

What exactly do you mean? Are you saying terminate the program on the Server or the local computer? Because, the program is run locally, through both services and programs. And I think they have something on the servers, but that's not what they use to keep them frozen.

And, you can't terminate a lot of the processes on the computers there. Get access denied on most. And, even if I could, I could sit there all day long terminating processes, and it wouldn't remove the protection on it. That's not how it works. Believe me, I tried it the other day that I installed a trial version of it on. If I remember correctly, it doesn't allow even the admin to terminate the process without using a password to disable it.

Have you been around that program? Here's a like if you want to take a look at it. (http://www.faronics.com/). Try downloading the Trial version of the Standard program. That's here: http://www.faronics.com/html/download.asp?software=1 if you have an extra computer you want to try it on. Once you have it installed, and the password enabled, try to disable/remove the program once it's enabled, without using the password. It's pretty difficult. Even if it looks gone, you restart, and any change will be restored to what was there before.

I mean, I know there are ways around it, but it's pretty hard. The only reason I can get around the 9x version is because I was able to get ahold of a program which removes it. But, you cant find that anywhere online.

yes, u can terminate the process. Though there are some processes that maintain the OS and there are some that run higher in the 'process tree' so therefore task manager wont be able to close it. further more, for this program, there is a decoy process running that is the same process, but it monitors the main one and restarts it if it is terminated. It usually tries to hide itself as a system process though. Oh, and once the processes are terminated, also terminate and restart explorer.exe and then delete the system (.sys) files accordingly. (and yes, i know the thing runs services and processes, but the services can be closed in 'services.msc') for the OS to be restored upon reboot, there AS TO BE A .SYS FILE! otherwise, it will be loaded as a driver, which cannot write data to a disk, or will not be loaded at all. (i know drivers are system files too, but a .drv file must only read and cannot perform anything else except make a certain setting accessible) Having the system files out of the way, u CAN reboot without it resetting all the data.[/quote]

Yeah, unless they log that too, which they probably do. Stupid school Admins. I bet you could do it easily at my school though. :)

Around 4-5pm? From school? It'd be kind of suspicious being there. Especially since everyone is gone after around 2:40-3PM, besides some teachers or staff.

When I go to school Tuesday (have Monday off) I'm taking a little program that allows you to end processes. I'll see what's running on the computers, since I can't access the task manager they have in the first place. But, I doubt I'd be able to end any of them, besides the ones I started. I still gotta mess with that program I have which removes that freezing program from 9x and see if it works with NT based versions. I know it wont with NTFS partitions, but it MAY with Fat32. I don't know. I would have tried messing with the stuff more so, if I knew exactly how they run their networks. I don't know anything about how they monitor anything at my school. Only where I work. So, I have browsed around on the server a few times, and you can see where their login scripts and stuff are, but I haven't done much else. I don't know how they'd respond if they caught someone doing anything. They gave me and my friend an hour after school detention once, in 10th grade, for just sending a message via "Winpopup" over the entire network. I didn't even do it. I was just talking to my friend about it, and showed him how to use it, but didn't actually do anything. I even warned him not to send anything. But, he typed like "fndsjfhs" and hit send, and it said something similar to:

"Message receieved at 2:30PM March 5, 2005 from User '<Insert Name>'"

"Message: fndsjfhs"

So, it told everyone who sent it, and everything. Then, of course, they asked him about it, and he mentioned my name, and even though they knew i didn't do anything, I still got the same punishment, because you're not supposed to even open a program that isnt either authorized to use by the school, or isn't school related.

Stupid school policy. That didn't go on my record, but still. It would have if it was something worse or a second offense.

LOL no no no, not locally restart the server, but just use a logonui.exe command to restart it

huh... i dont see why it wouldnt work on a FAT32 table. windows 9x can be ran on it so it should be able to.

Please share the logon and logoff scripts with me! They could be running the freeze before boot or shutdown. also, explore the gpedit.msc in the 'system32' folder if ya can :)


ooooooo wow... that sucks lol i wouldve just send a pop up message to everyone one the network through the command prompt's net send and sending it to a range of IPs running on the network. but yea... dont do it again lol :P

Anonymous
March 16th, 2005, 01:39 PM
at my schoolthey have a saint bernardblocker which blocks games and anything entertaining except for fucking funbrain.com. oh and if yur wondering how i am homeschooled but go to chool we have math and writing lasses on tuesdays and thursdays. if any of you have ever heard of it plz tell me how to get bpast it cuz the teachers have some password they have to type

Ravenous
March 16th, 2005, 01:56 PM
go to linuxbrew.com

Anonymous
March 16th, 2005, 02:31 PM
thx