When I have caught him on FB, he wasn't using a remote session. He isn't that savvy so it must be a relatively simple way he's doing it. I'll do some more digging around whether I'm allowing uncategorized stuff to get through. I'm finding the reporting isn't always accurate, so that's not helping either. e. g., if i filter on username, sometimes it misreports and shows a terminal server IP instead of the user's desktop. Facebook never shows up in the log. It's usually these sites that show up in the log: etc. Haven't heard of but the rest of those are just certification revocation list publishing points for SSL vendors. Thatcher This person is a verified professional. Verify your account to enable IT peers to see that you are a professional. May 5, 2014 at 19:51 UTC Sounds like he's using an encrypted connection (one of the tips from @Rockn's link) and it is getting through the firewall. I haven't been able to figure out how he was doing it, but I did get to stir the pot. I informed a VP who hates that anyone is ever on Facebook, so that employee now has a babysitter.
The first thing to note is that married people typically wear their wedding bands closer to their hearts—in other words, below the engagement ring. Probably the most popular way to swing this is to move your engagement ring to your right hand for your walk down the aisle. That way, your fiance can slide your wedding band onto your left hand, and you can then later place your engagement ring on top of it. "Usually people have slightly larger ring sizes on the right hand, but as long as it is within a quarter of size, this should work, " Ghanimian says. If the engagement ring is too big or too small to do this—or you just don't want to take the engagement ring off (and risk losing it! )—it's okay to put your band above your engagement ring. Some brides even have the wedding band soldered to the engagement ring, so it becomes one piece of jewelry, and represents the marital bond. After the wedding day, wear your engagement and wedding rings however you like them best. Again, the most popular way in the US is to have them both on the ring finger of the left hand with your wedding band first, but you can separate them and wear them on opposite hands, or you can wear your wedding band solo.