|
|
|
|
|
by PhLR
684 days ago
|
|
We talked to lots of CISOs, InfoSec managers and IT admins about that issue.
There's basically two camps: Actively block any new tool vs. not block but educate so people don't do anything stupid. I feel not blocking makes most sense. Employee's want to be treated like adults, especially in tech savvy companies. If they feel like they are unnecessarily blocked they will just find a workaround (i.e. non-work email or device). However, you definitely want to keep track of people are signing up for - that's where the Shadow IT scanner comes in handy. In case you see something that's against policy it's often enough to just explain why it's a risk for the company. No employee means harm and just wants to be treated like an adult. |
|
But it is helpful to block certain things that are just too common outside of work so people just don't think twice. Things like ChatGPT, Grammerly, Pastebin, etc. should be manually blocked.