<html><head></head><body><div>You centrally manage all linux devices, controlling what users can (and can't) do on their company-issued linux machines?</div><div>And you can keep them configured in a certain way (re-setting them back to your company policy as needed)?</div><div>And you can remotely push software, make some of it brain-dead, and uninstall it at will from your centralized system?</div><div>All this without needing ssh or logging into each system individually?</div><div>And you've been doing that for almost 20 years? </div><div><br></div><div>Tell me more.</div><div><br></div><div>On Fri, 2018-06-15 at 21:42 +0000, Iznogoud wrote:</div><blockquote type="cite"><pre><blockquote type="cite">
Linux doesn't have a way for employers to do that to my knowledge.
</blockquote>
There are plenty. It may involve having passwords on the BIOS in order to be
user-restrictive, but generally if they control the network over which your
desktop is connected, they can have you do anything you need without superuser
access.
Been doing it for 19.65 years now, successfully.
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