this post was submitted on 08 Apr 2024
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There's Zscaler for Linux. We're using it in our corpo.
You have to run your software mirror no matter what. Even if it's a proxy mirror where you don't actually store most of the packages.
SELinux/AppArmor for more granular access policies.
SSSD connects local auth with AD.
You should look into what your vendor has on offer, e.g. Landscape if you're on Ubuntu.
As others have said config-as-code would probably be part of the equation too.
Zscaler is corporate spyware. As far as I know, it can log all connections, even ones that don't go through the Zscaler nodes. It can also act as MITM proxy.
I'm doubtful about whether it's (or at least many configurations of it) are legal in EU.
I hate zscaler. At my company it's set up so that it proxies all traffic through it and comes with its own CA certificates, which breaks a lot of things - I can't install pip packages for python, I can't clone/work with git repos if they're on https only. We are used to temporarily disable it to do these things because corporate won't change the policies.
Sounds like it's used as a MITM proxy and logs all website URLs you visit. If you live in EU that's probably illegal.
Sure. It's certainly legal in NA and widely used. Any VPN can do that too. A corpo can install anything on their hardware and the hardware should be considered to be spying by default.
Oh and MITM proxying has been a fact of every corpo I've worked in. It's the only way to reliably prevent people from accessing the list of sites the corpo doesn't want accessed.