[Hidden-tech] Separate lan for company laptop

Donald M Stevens dstevens at tryandfindit.com
Sun Mar 3 22:47:53 UTC 2019


Hey Andy
Your switch idea may work.
Let me think for a moment..
(Celtics have a time out)
Don

Get Outlook for Android<https://aka.ms/ghei36>

________________________________
From: Andy Klapper <atk at AndyKlapper.com>
Sent: Sunday, March 3, 2019 3:02:47 PM
To: Donald M Stevens; 'Aaron E-J'
Cc: hidden-discuss at lists.hidden-tech.net
Subject: RE: [Hidden-tech] Separate lan for company laptop

Good morning all,

My plan is to have the laptop hardwired into a docking station, at least I assume they are going to be sending me a docking station.

The router is an ASUS RT-AC68U with the latest update applied.  I suspect that it can create a separate LAN for the laptop.

My current theory is that a network switch (as opposed to a hub) placed between the cable modem and the router with three connections (the cable modem, router and laptop) will provide the security that I want, an extra port (which I also need) and a very easy setup for the cost of a switch that was sitting in my cabinet gathering dust.

If this solution isn’t as secure or has some other issues that in my ignorance I’m unaware of please let me know.


Andy

From: Hidden-discuss <hidden-discuss-bounces at lists.hidden-tech.net> On Behalf Of Donald M Stevens via Hidden-discuss
Sent: Sunday, March 03, 2019 8:15 AM
To: Aaron E-J <the at otherrealm.org>
Cc: hidden-discuss at lists.hidden-tech.net
Subject: Re: [Hidden-tech] Separate lan for company laptop

Good morning andy,

If your current router offers WiFi, you could just use the company laptop, connect to your home WiFi “Guest” network, then your business laptop will have access to the internet, but not anything on your internal network. (of course you won’t be able to print to your home network printer if you have one).

The “Guest” WiFi network be default on most routers works this way.

Can you post the make / model of your home router? That will give us some idea of the options you might have. (unless you don’t want anyone to know that)

Are you planning on connecting your work laptop with a wire and not wireless?

There may also be an option for DMZ, this allows you to create an area where you laptop can sit, outsiders like your work, will have access, your business laptop will have internet access, but no access to the rest of your home network.


Thanks!
Don

TFI Technologies
“we are here to help you….”
329 Pease Road
East Longmeadow, MA 01028
Office: 413.308.4511
Cell / Text: 860.614.4153
Email: dstevens at tryandfindit.com<mailto:dstevens at tryandfindit.com>
LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/don-stevens-504aa6b<https://www.linkedin.com/in/don-stevens-504aa6b?lipi=urn%3Ali%3Apage%3Ad_flagship3_profile_view_base_contact_details%3Bzo%2BD4wDfQ%2FCDVF26QLPsXw%3D%3D>
Skype: tryandfindit


From: Hidden-discuss <hidden-discuss-bounces at lists.hidden-tech.net<mailto:hidden-discuss-bounces at lists.hidden-tech.net>> On Behalf Of Aaron E-J via Hidden-discuss
Sent: Saturday, March 02, 2019 10:22 PM
To: hidden-discuss at lists.hidden-tech.net<mailto:hidden-discuss at lists.hidden-tech.net>
Subject: Re: [Hidden-tech] Separate lan for company laptop

Most routers have the ability to set up a guest network (I know that Netgear does and I think that other companies have similar things).  If you login to the router, look for something that has 'guest' or 'subnet" in its name, enable it and uncheck "Allow guest to access My Local Network" (at least that is what you do on Netgear).  I would keep a firewall in place though, because the firewall is mainly preventing malicious incoming traffic from getting in.  There isn't much that you can do to prevent them from knowing that things are coming from the same place unless you set up a VPN but placing your work computer in a different subnet will allow you to share files in your personal network without risking it being seen by your employer.

Aaron E-J

The Other Realm LLC

http://otherrealm.org

http://theotherrealm.org (Blog)
On 2019-03-02 5:46 PM, Andy Klapper via Hidden-discuss wrote:
I’ve spent a lot of time working remotely for various companies but I just got a new job where I am being issued a company laptop (in the past I’ve been a consultant and provided my own hardware).  Because this is company hardware they can put anything they want on the laptop and I not only have zero say on it but they don’t even have to tell me what they put on the laptop.  I would like to structure my home network so that this laptop sits outside of the firewall that surrounds my home network.  How do I go about doing that?  Is it as simple as putting a small inexpensive router between my cable modem and my primary house router?  Do I need to do more to secure my home network from my foreign hardware?

Thanks,


Andy.

Andy Klapper
Asgard Technology Group, LLC
Making Complex Software Simple
AndyTK at Asgard-Tech.com<mailto:AndyTK at Asgard-Tech.com>
(860) 805-1189 (cell)




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