The family has parenting issues that cannot be resolved with a
technological solution. if he's using the Internet when he's not supposed
to be, then only a behavioral adjustment can be successful.
With administrative rights, he can undo anything you can do, and will
probably find that undo very quickly. Taking away his administrative
access is no solution. Anyone who has physical access has total access.
Methods for gaining an administrator-level password are posted in these
newsgroups nearly every day.
Jaws <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:
> I look after a wireless network for a family with a teenage son. Said son has
> a PC which connects to his (secured) home network, but which can also connect
> to an unsecured network nearby. The family wish to restrict his net access to
> certain times of day, but he is getting around this by connecting to the
> unsecured network. The company with the unsecured network are not interested
> in locking it down despite the risks.
> Any ideas how the son's PC can be made to connect only to his home network?
> It runs XP Pro, and the home net has static addressing, WPA, and MAC
> filtering (so I'm not worried about others getting in, only him getting out).
> The son has admin rights on his PC, so I'm looking for something like an
> obscure registry hack that I can apply without him noticing.
--
Gary L. Smith
(E-Mail Removed)
Columbus, Ohio