Blocking Wi-Fi depends on the operating system in use. Different platforms handle network restrictions uniquely.
Blocking Wi-Fi depends on the operating system in use. Different platforms handle network restrictions uniquely.
Posture policies is the name they use in Cisco's environment. Likely other vendors have similar terms for their systems too. For instance: https://community.cisco.com/t5/policy-an...-p/2735510
It might be that the login is being blocked due to the browser recognizing it as running on Linux. You can verify this by installing a plugin that mimics a Windows environment.
It's not only the web browser; the operating system must also join the Wi-Fi network before accessing the internet.
I sense they’re attempting to remove me from their network because they dislike my presence. I’ve been using a VPN to bypass their filtering, which they’re aware of and trying to block. Since it operates on port 80, they can’t fully stop it. It seems they’re more interested in causing trouble than solving the issue.
I know this is an old report but have to checked something like this? https://askubuntu.com/questions/285234/c...and-mschap I find it very hard to believe they went to the trouble of blocking Linux. Do they block Android phones too seeing as they are WAY less secure?
Android works well enough. It's surprising they've been compromised four times recently, with one incident causing a week-long internet outage.
You can check the security settings by reviewing system properties or logs without directly asking the user. The default option is often visible in the interface or documentation.