Like exercises, food, ad other stuff
It's the first day of summer I think it was around 5 am today
Access lists filter network traffic by controlling whether routed packets are forwarded or blocked at the router's interfaces. Your router examines each packet to determine whether to forward or drop the packet, based on the criteria you specified within the access lists. Access list criteria could be the source address of the traffic, the destination address of the traffic, the upper-layer protocol, or other information. Note that sophisticated users can sometimes successfully evade or fool basic access lists because no authentication is required. Group policy is an extremely important feature in all of the Windows NT based server operating systems, including 2000, 2003, and 2008. Group Policy provides centralized management along with configuration for remote users and computers inside an Active Directory server environment. Group Policy is the set of rules and standards that dictates what users can and cannot do on an Active Directory computer network, as well as what computers they can do it from. The primary reason for implementing group policy is security related, restricting access to individual files, computer systems, server drives, and so forth. It is often even used in smaller network environments, such as schools, to ensure network functionality by blocking potentially harmful functions. Examples of what things Group Policy can limit are as broad as entire virtual drivers, or something as simple as blocking the Windows Task Manager from running, prohibiting the use of Regedit, restricting access to folders, disallowing the use of executables, and much, much more.