Proxy Servers
trlists at clayst.com
trlists at clayst.com
Fri Mar 4 09:24:36 EST 2005
I am familiar with the general idea of proxy servers, which I
understand to be to provide caching, filtering, and perhaps logging
and/or authorization checks, for access to the wider 'net from inside a
corporate or institutional LAN.
However I've never worked with them so I'm curious to get some opinions
about a situation I ran into. Specifically, a relative recently
informed me that in order to get into a local university network to
access some class materials held at the campus library web site she had
to configure her browser to use the university's proxy server.
Am I missing something, or is this a completely backward use of a proxy
server? It also seems insecure as anyone with access to the proxy
server can then read all her web traffic.
I do get the idea that the university would require a proxy for users
on its internal network to access the web. But is it really sensible
to do it the other way around, or is it as clueless as it looks to me
right now?
Thanks for any info,
--
Tom
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