What happens to the company if you get hit by a bus on your way to lunch today?Ĭomplete the list as best you can. YOU are the ONLY person who knows this information. Your employer has every right to have admin-level passwords securely on file in case something happens to the system administrator(s). having his user account be the AD administrator. imagine someone using a windows server (critical one), utorrent, circumventing router/system config, just to have around 300GB of porn/piracy in company equipment. Previously, some people had access to many equipments, and all sorts of problems happened. I can print it, but then I won't assume any responsability for the administration of equipments/systems that are in the file. Don't want to take it with me to the grave.īut having that file just sitting in his desk, without any type of control/security to who reads it, and when? Big hole there. My problem is, he dismissed my suggestion of acquiring a safe box, and have those password sealed in an envelop inside, if anything happens, and I'm not around (as Reap3r said). For active Directory, we have an outsourced/business partner who has the AD admin rights necessary, if something happens to me :) He only wants the admin password for the Active Directory and equipments, services (dns and stuff).įor the equipments and services, he already has access. person should be able to make sense of it and use it responsibly (i'd hope).Īlthough does sound odd that he wants all that info from you, as said in a previous post, I'd find a box and a yucca plant! He's never asked me for anything like what your boss is asking for, I've offered it in a Recovery Document incase something happens to me. He was quite shocked, but then had to realise a network administrator needs such access to ensure the role can be done. My boss once asked me what I had access to on the network and i said, as a user, the same as you, as a network administrator, everything. This document never really leaves my side (on iPad/iPhone) and is stored in a signed sealed envelope in the safe. another optimization is that the password list is tried only when the first unpack attempt (without password) reports a password error or decryption error this saves unnecessary unpack attempts for damaged unencrypted archives.We have a Disaster Recovery Document that contains everything from usernames and passwords of all infrastructure devices and online services administrative and installer accounts and passwords Software Keys, licence info, 3rd party websites with username and passwords.for rar4-archives and for 7z-archives it is not possible to differentiate between damaged archive and wrong password for those archives if the first unpack attempt (without password) fails the program executes par-check (preferably quick par-check if enabled via option "ParQuick") before trying the passwords from the list.for rar5-archives a wrong password is reported by unrar unambiguously and the program can immediately try other passwords from the password list.implemented different strategies for rar4 and rar5-archives taking into account the features of formats.during unpack the passwords are tried from the file until unpack succeeds or all passwords were tried.new option "UnpackPassFile" to set the location of the file.As requested - added support for password list file:
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