installing random software on company PC [closed]











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I am trying to install one program for sketching on my work PC, but I dont have admin rights.



The problem is that I really like to use the software, which has 30day free trial, but I dont wanna carry personal laptop to work. Do you guys have any ideas how to by pass company protection?



Thank










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closed as off-topic by IInspectable, Fildor, bummi, mirtheil, Raymond Chen Nov 19 at 19:20


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "Questions about general computing hardware and software are off-topic for Stack Overflow unless they directly involve tools used primarily for programming. You may be able to get help on Super User." – bummi, mirtheil

If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.













  • The company protection is there for a reason. Trying to bypass it sounds like a bad idea, both legally and morally.
    – dcp
    Nov 19 at 17:02








  • 1




    DON'T. Even if you managed to bypass company protection, you shouldn't. You can be reprimanded for it. Try to go the "official" way and ask your superior what to do. There may be a company standard solution for "sketching" apps.
    – Fildor
    Nov 19 at 17:02








  • 2




    I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because it is not about programming.
    – IInspectable
    Nov 19 at 17:06










  • If you already downloaded the installer, delete it and wipe any trace of it! Run Anti-Virus in "look closely"-mode. You seem unaware but you could be fired for this !
    – Fildor
    Nov 19 at 17:07












  • Maybe ask your system administrator for a virtual machine to test on, and let them download and virus check the software for you. Corporate rules can be very strict when it comes to allowed software. It is red tape all the way I am afraid. Necessary in today's world of so much malware. The application can send stuff over the Internet - for all you know.
    – Stein Åsmul
    Nov 19 at 18:02

















up vote
-2
down vote

favorite












I am trying to install one program for sketching on my work PC, but I dont have admin rights.



The problem is that I really like to use the software, which has 30day free trial, but I dont wanna carry personal laptop to work. Do you guys have any ideas how to by pass company protection?



Thank










share|improve this question













closed as off-topic by IInspectable, Fildor, bummi, mirtheil, Raymond Chen Nov 19 at 19:20


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "Questions about general computing hardware and software are off-topic for Stack Overflow unless they directly involve tools used primarily for programming. You may be able to get help on Super User." – bummi, mirtheil

If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.













  • The company protection is there for a reason. Trying to bypass it sounds like a bad idea, both legally and morally.
    – dcp
    Nov 19 at 17:02








  • 1




    DON'T. Even if you managed to bypass company protection, you shouldn't. You can be reprimanded for it. Try to go the "official" way and ask your superior what to do. There may be a company standard solution for "sketching" apps.
    – Fildor
    Nov 19 at 17:02








  • 2




    I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because it is not about programming.
    – IInspectable
    Nov 19 at 17:06










  • If you already downloaded the installer, delete it and wipe any trace of it! Run Anti-Virus in "look closely"-mode. You seem unaware but you could be fired for this !
    – Fildor
    Nov 19 at 17:07












  • Maybe ask your system administrator for a virtual machine to test on, and let them download and virus check the software for you. Corporate rules can be very strict when it comes to allowed software. It is red tape all the way I am afraid. Necessary in today's world of so much malware. The application can send stuff over the Internet - for all you know.
    – Stein Åsmul
    Nov 19 at 18:02















up vote
-2
down vote

favorite









up vote
-2
down vote

favorite











I am trying to install one program for sketching on my work PC, but I dont have admin rights.



The problem is that I really like to use the software, which has 30day free trial, but I dont wanna carry personal laptop to work. Do you guys have any ideas how to by pass company protection?



Thank










share|improve this question













I am trying to install one program for sketching on my work PC, but I dont have admin rights.



The problem is that I really like to use the software, which has 30day free trial, but I dont wanna carry personal laptop to work. Do you guys have any ideas how to by pass company protection?



Thank







windows installation






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share|improve this question











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asked Nov 19 at 17:01









Juan Carlos Joaquin

205




205




closed as off-topic by IInspectable, Fildor, bummi, mirtheil, Raymond Chen Nov 19 at 19:20


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "Questions about general computing hardware and software are off-topic for Stack Overflow unless they directly involve tools used primarily for programming. You may be able to get help on Super User." – bummi, mirtheil

If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.




closed as off-topic by IInspectable, Fildor, bummi, mirtheil, Raymond Chen Nov 19 at 19:20


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "Questions about general computing hardware and software are off-topic for Stack Overflow unless they directly involve tools used primarily for programming. You may be able to get help on Super User." – bummi, mirtheil

If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.












  • The company protection is there for a reason. Trying to bypass it sounds like a bad idea, both legally and morally.
    – dcp
    Nov 19 at 17:02








  • 1




    DON'T. Even if you managed to bypass company protection, you shouldn't. You can be reprimanded for it. Try to go the "official" way and ask your superior what to do. There may be a company standard solution for "sketching" apps.
    – Fildor
    Nov 19 at 17:02








  • 2




    I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because it is not about programming.
    – IInspectable
    Nov 19 at 17:06










  • If you already downloaded the installer, delete it and wipe any trace of it! Run Anti-Virus in "look closely"-mode. You seem unaware but you could be fired for this !
    – Fildor
    Nov 19 at 17:07












  • Maybe ask your system administrator for a virtual machine to test on, and let them download and virus check the software for you. Corporate rules can be very strict when it comes to allowed software. It is red tape all the way I am afraid. Necessary in today's world of so much malware. The application can send stuff over the Internet - for all you know.
    – Stein Åsmul
    Nov 19 at 18:02




















  • The company protection is there for a reason. Trying to bypass it sounds like a bad idea, both legally and morally.
    – dcp
    Nov 19 at 17:02








  • 1




    DON'T. Even if you managed to bypass company protection, you shouldn't. You can be reprimanded for it. Try to go the "official" way and ask your superior what to do. There may be a company standard solution for "sketching" apps.
    – Fildor
    Nov 19 at 17:02








  • 2




    I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because it is not about programming.
    – IInspectable
    Nov 19 at 17:06










  • If you already downloaded the installer, delete it and wipe any trace of it! Run Anti-Virus in "look closely"-mode. You seem unaware but you could be fired for this !
    – Fildor
    Nov 19 at 17:07












  • Maybe ask your system administrator for a virtual machine to test on, and let them download and virus check the software for you. Corporate rules can be very strict when it comes to allowed software. It is red tape all the way I am afraid. Necessary in today's world of so much malware. The application can send stuff over the Internet - for all you know.
    – Stein Åsmul
    Nov 19 at 18:02


















The company protection is there for a reason. Trying to bypass it sounds like a bad idea, both legally and morally.
– dcp
Nov 19 at 17:02






The company protection is there for a reason. Trying to bypass it sounds like a bad idea, both legally and morally.
– dcp
Nov 19 at 17:02






1




1




DON'T. Even if you managed to bypass company protection, you shouldn't. You can be reprimanded for it. Try to go the "official" way and ask your superior what to do. There may be a company standard solution for "sketching" apps.
– Fildor
Nov 19 at 17:02






DON'T. Even if you managed to bypass company protection, you shouldn't. You can be reprimanded for it. Try to go the "official" way and ask your superior what to do. There may be a company standard solution for "sketching" apps.
– Fildor
Nov 19 at 17:02






2




2




I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because it is not about programming.
– IInspectable
Nov 19 at 17:06




I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because it is not about programming.
– IInspectable
Nov 19 at 17:06












If you already downloaded the installer, delete it and wipe any trace of it! Run Anti-Virus in "look closely"-mode. You seem unaware but you could be fired for this !
– Fildor
Nov 19 at 17:07






If you already downloaded the installer, delete it and wipe any trace of it! Run Anti-Virus in "look closely"-mode. You seem unaware but you could be fired for this !
– Fildor
Nov 19 at 17:07














Maybe ask your system administrator for a virtual machine to test on, and let them download and virus check the software for you. Corporate rules can be very strict when it comes to allowed software. It is red tape all the way I am afraid. Necessary in today's world of so much malware. The application can send stuff over the Internet - for all you know.
– Stein Åsmul
Nov 19 at 18:02






Maybe ask your system administrator for a virtual machine to test on, and let them download and virus check the software for you. Corporate rules can be very strict when it comes to allowed software. It is red tape all the way I am afraid. Necessary in today's world of so much malware. The application can send stuff over the Internet - for all you know.
– Stein Åsmul
Nov 19 at 18:02



















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