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They Wanted 60 Emails a Day for USB Access – He Made Sure They Regretted It

by Jeffrey Stone
October 2, 2025
in Social Issues

A programmer was sent to a construction site with his work laptop and an old external hard drive. His job was straightforward, transfer large files back and forth to keep the project running smoothly.

But instead of focusing on his actual work, he quickly ran into a company rule that made everything much harder than it needed to be.

The rule was simple but frustrating: every single time he plugged in his USB drive, he had to send an email to the company’s admin team to receive a one-time password. Only then could he use the drive.

For someone who needed constant access to his files, this rule turned into a nightmare. What should have been a smooth process became a series of delays and wasted time. Instead of writing code and solving problems, he was stuck sending emails and waiting for responses.

They Wanted 60 Emails a Day for USB Access - He Made Sure They Regretted It
Not the actual photo

When Bureaucracy Clashes with Productivity – Here’s The Original Post:

When your company asks you to email them every time you want USB access in company laptops?

So I was once sent out as an onsite software programmer to join a crew working at a ride construction site.

They gave me a laptop with some limited space and an old 1TB external drive with extra data on it, the kind which needed an external power supply to run...

Now there are two things which are worth noting about the company. Exteremly tech unfriendly (not many tech people in the company). Very bureaucratic, even in the face of emergency.

So as a programmer, I was subject to the same laptop restrictions as say, a sales rep or a business op. Which is really unfair when you have to work...

And they had blocked transfer on all plain text files. Which is what all source code files happen to be.

I was told I would have to email the admin staff EVERY TIME I wanted to plug in the usb drive, the admin would validate with my department,

and they would generate for me a one time password for that usb 'session' which was unique to that device.

That really annoyed the hell out of me because I knew I would have a lot of copying/backing up to do every now and then. So I came up with...

I'd use the password to grant usb access to the drive, copy a few files, then I'd cut power to it and reconnect it. New session, new password needed, new...

I told them that it being a construction site, power was very unstable, and the drive they gave me kept disconnecting because it needed external power.

I did this every 10-15 minutes, maybe about 50-60 times a day, for 3 days.

At the end of the third day, the admin head called me himself to grant me admin rights to the laptop so that I could disable the monitoring software for...

When I went back, they held a meeting to review onsite policies for technical and support visits.

EDIT: I really didnt make this clear I think. Usually admin blocked USB access outright.

In my case, after requesting, they allowed USB access, but they applied the policy usually reserved for sales reps (which blocks documents, videos, etc from being transferred to/from anywhere, which...

It was an urgent short term trip to complete this project which was gonna run on an isolated system, so setting up an elaborate delivery was pretty much overkill.

And the internet access onsite was pretty terrible anyway. I don't actually have a problem with putting in security measures to disallow unknown usb devices from being plugged in.

I think thats required. But a device they already verified and vetted? Thats a bit much.

EDIT 2: This is actually from some time ago, things have been better since then and a couple other incidents. We get encrypted drives with passwords atleast. And no dinosaur...

Why the Policy Was a Problem

The company probably created this rule to prevent data breaches or protect against malware.

USB drives can sometimes carry viruses or be used to steal sensitive information. But the policy didn’t take into account the type of work being done.

It might have made sense for sales staff or office workers who rarely needed USB drives, but for him it was a major roadblock.

The Clever Plan

Instead of complaining or trying to ignore the rule, the programmer decided to follow it exactly as written. If the company required an email for every single USB connection, then that’s exactly what he would give them.

But he didn’t stop there. To prove how impractical the rule was, he found a way to cut power to his external drive every 10 to 15 minutes.

Each time the power was cut, the system treated it as if the drive had been reconnected. That meant he had to send another email asking for a password.

In just one day, the admin team received 50 to 60 emails from him alone. And he kept this up for three days straight.

The Breaking Point

It didn’t take long before the admin team realized how bad the situation had become. Their inbox was flooded with requests, and instead of improving security, the policy was only creating more problems.

After three days of nonstop emails, the head admin finally gave up. They granted the programmer temporary control over his laptop so he could use the USB drive without constantly needing new passwords.

The policy was still in place, but at least it no longer blocked him from doing his work.

Why His Plan Worked

By following the rule exactly as written, the programmer exposed just how unreasonable it was. If he had simply complained, the company might have dismissed his concerns.

But by showing them the real-world results, dozens of wasted emails every day, he forced them to face the problem.

His plan worked because it highlighted the gap between security rules and practical work.

Companies often create blanket policies without thinking about how they affect employees in different roles. A rule that looks good on paper can become a disaster in practice.

Expert Opinion

Technology experts often warn about the risks of strict policies that don’t match real job needs. A 2024 report by Cybersecurity Insider found that 72% of employees admitted to bypassing IT rules when they made work harder.

Tech consultant Sarah Johnson explained in a 2023 TechCrunch article:

“Security measures must align with job demands, blanket USB bans without robust file-sharing alternatives hurt productivity.”

In this case, the programmer didn’t try to bypass the rules at all, he followed them too closely. By doing so, he showed the company that the system needed to change.

Here’s what the community had to contribute:

They praised his creativity and patience, saying it was a clever example of “malicious compliance”, when someone follows the rules so literally that it exposes how broken they are.

classybroad19 − I'm so proud of your dedication and follow through.

GeneralConfusion − /r/talesfromtechsupport would probably love this. I sure did.

tenebralupo − Oh god the security policies at your work is so horrible. Sometimes it needs that kind of determination to show how inconvenient stupids policies needs to be revoked

Some even joked that he should have written a program to send the emails automatically, just to make the problem worse for the admin team.

[Reddit User] − And they had blocked transfer on all plain text files. Which is the only file type that can't infect your computer.

DemandsBattletoads − This seems familiar. Does this company start with "S"?

binarycow − At my organization, USB access is denied for everyone. No exceptions. NONE. Not even people with elevated privileges. Not even the CEO.

Dawzy − Whilst in your case it sucks, more and more companies are stopping employees from plugging random USB devices into their machines.

As someone who performs social engineering tests on companies, the classic "drops an infected USB drive near the businesses entrance" is enough for an employee to plug the drive into...

What your company needs is a better file transfer system for their programmers.

Others shared their own stories about dealing with IT rules that slowed down their work.

morningmotherlover − Couldn't you have automated the email upon usb connect somehow

h333h333 − This is funny because I was just reading a report for school about how useless many Internal Controls are because they can just be eliminated once they become...

[Reddit User] − ITT people who don't understand basic computer and network security.

A Tech Triumph or a Risky Hack?

In the end, the programmer won his small battle. His clever USB trick forced the company to reconsider how their rules were affecting real work. He didn’t break the rules, the simply followed them so carefully that they collapsed under their own weight.

This story is a reminder that workplace policies should make jobs easier, not harder. Security is important, but it should never come at the cost of productivity. Sometimes the best way to change a bad system is not to ignore it, but to show exactly how broken it is.

If you were in his position, what would you have done? Would you fight the rule with the same tactic, or would you try to negotiate a calmer solution with management?

 

Jeffrey Stone

Jeffrey Stone

Jeffrey Stone is a valuable freelance writer at DAILY HIGHLIGHT. As a senior entertainment and news writer, Jarvis brings a wealth of expertise in the field, specifically focusing on the entertainment industry.

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