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this post was submitted on 22 Aug 2023
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Privacy
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We record network traffic, not data from your browser. We can see every URL any device on the network hits, regardless if the traffic comes from a browser or even a phone app.
In addition, some companies install software on each employee's machine that enhances what they can monitor on that machine. It may not be labeled "corporate spyware" but something like "endpoint security", yet it may have the capacity to track pretty much everything you do.
Products such as Cisco Umbrella cover both. There's a DNS appliance inside the network, as well as a client software that installs on devices that forces them to use Umbrella's public DNS server when being used on another network.
This means we can track everything on the company owner device, even when you are at Starbucks or at home.
Never expect privacy on any device and/or network you don't have ownership and control over.
How is this with mobile devices from your employer. I have a company iPhone and understand that there is a certain “space” on the phone which is controlled by the company, mostly all the Microsoft 365 apps (so, for example it is not possible to copy/paste stuff between MS and non-MS apps).
However, for the rest I would assume that all the other traffic does not go through company servers (probably no traffic at all, as I usually have a local IP), and that they can’t see what I am doing in my other apps. Otherwise they could spy on all my transactions I do in my banking apps for example. But AFAIK iOS apps are pretty much sandboxed anyway.
This might be different on my company PC / Laptop, though.
Most companies deploy management software on their mobile devices. They have the ability to monitor activity and do things like remote wipe the device if you're fired. On iPhone go to settings->general->vpn and device management to see if anything's there.
Thanks for pointing me to this setting. There are two profiles, one is my personal VPN, which I use for device-wide ad-blocking (AdGuard Pro), another one is the MDM management profile. The latter one consists of a list of managed Microsoft apps (e.g. Outlook, OneDrive, Teams, etc.) and various (device) certificates. I guess nothing to be concerned about.
The security on your device doesn't matter at all.
For ANY device to reach ANYTHING on the Internet it has to send a lookup request to a DNS server to get the IP of the server.
A privately controlled network can easily force all of those requests through their own private DNS server which captures all activity.
I am actually running AdGuard Pro with a custom DNS on that device.
That device would not be able to reach th custom DNS in the scenario I mentioned. If it cannot fall back to the network's DNS it would simply fail to reach any websites.
That’s what I meant to say, that your scenario is unlikely in my case.
If your company also pays for your phone's data bill, we can see a general overview of what sites you visit.
That could be possible, I don’t know. I am not visiting any adult or otherwise inappropriate sites on that phone, but I do a lot of Reddit, Lemmy, Mastodon stuff in my free time. But it was this way for the past 10 years and I never had any problems. Sometimes I think about buying i private phone, but it seems kinda stupid to have two of these devices.
That could be possible, I don’t know. I am not visiting any adult or otherwise inappropriate sites on that phone, but I do a lot of Reddit, Lemmy, Mastodon stuff in my free time. But it was this way for the past 10 years and I never had any problems. Sometimes I think about buying i private phone, but it seems kinda stupid to have two of these devices.
How about DoH? Firefox supports it, and not every IT admin has blocked the ability to use it. (mozilla.cfg)
That only provides a secure connection to the DNS server. The DNS server can still log your activity.
When on a private network, all DNS traffic can be forced to use a inhouse DNS server that records everything.