We didn't.
Shifted gears and since we were already using one vendors filtering database we used our existing license key for their new shiny webfiltering solution. Much better reporting, much better "use and abuse" management as well.
The biggest change is in the licensing size for the management database. Under Bordermanager a user who had an computer, a laptop and came into a remote VDI session counted as "1" user. Under the new system, each devices counts as "1" user. We went from X thousand users connecting to 4X users connecting when you included are "Guest" wireless network (which seems to attract every iPhone in a 20 block radius). Once we got the licensing churn solved, it settled down into a nice pattern. One of the things that happened is that the filter catagories got more accurate. As example, twitter wasn't blocked under the old social media filter, now it is. On the upside we are now able to provide our users with streaming media and also tell their bosses when they've spent the day watching kitten videos.
Internet Cop, just another job for getting IT done
The biggest change is in the licensing size for the management database. Under Bordermanager a user who had an computer, a laptop and came into a remote VDI session counted as "1" user. Under the new system, each devices counts as "1" user. We went from X thousand users connecting to 4X users connecting when you included are "Guest" wireless network (which seems to attract every iPhone in a 20 block radius). Once we got the licensing churn solved, it settled down into a nice pattern. One of the things that happened is that the filter catagories got more accurate. As example, twitter wasn't blocked under the old social media filter, now it is. On the upside we are now able to provide our users with streaming media and also tell their bosses when they've spent the day watching kitten videos.
Internet Cop, just another job for getting IT done
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