I am running Kubuntu 24.04 on a barebones desktop PC with an ASUS motherboard. My PC connects to a TP-Link Router through a short Ethernet cable. Using a much longer Ethernet cable, the TP-Link Router connects to a Motorola cable modem, which provides access to XFinity (Comcast) Internet services. I have NO firewall applications running. All Wifi is turned off. I mostly use the Brave Browser with the uBlock Origin add-blocking plugin.
For some reason, when I log into my bank account, credit card account, eBay account, Google GMail account, or auto insurance account, I get an email message telling me that an unknown device (or an unknown user) has recently logged in. I am directed to ignore this message if the person logging in was me. These warning e-mail messages are being produced in more and more of the online accounts and services that I use.
Note: About five years ago, I was using MS Windows 10 (which I later abandoned for Linux). I had the same network configuration (router, modem, etc.), but I never experienced this difficulty. The identification problem started after I switched to Linux.
The attached text file shows some examples of the e-mail warnings that I have received.
Recently, I created an X (twitter) online account. I got a couple of these warning messages from X (recent login from an unknown device). About 4-5 days later, I was notified by e-mail that my account had been canceled because I [allegedly] had supplied fraudulent identification. I have been unable to reach anyone at X (even by e-mail) to resolve this problem.
I somehow need to determine why remote systems cannot properly identify me.
Thanks.
For some reason, when I log into my bank account, credit card account, eBay account, Google GMail account, or auto insurance account, I get an email message telling me that an unknown device (or an unknown user) has recently logged in. I am directed to ignore this message if the person logging in was me. These warning e-mail messages are being produced in more and more of the online accounts and services that I use.
Note: About five years ago, I was using MS Windows 10 (which I later abandoned for Linux). I had the same network configuration (router, modem, etc.), but I never experienced this difficulty. The identification problem started after I switched to Linux.
The attached text file shows some examples of the e-mail warnings that I have received.
Recently, I created an X (twitter) online account. I got a couple of these warning messages from X (recent login from an unknown device). About 4-5 days later, I was notified by e-mail that my account had been canceled because I [allegedly] had supplied fraudulent identification. I have been unable to reach anyone at X (even by e-mail) to resolve this problem.
I somehow need to determine why remote systems cannot properly identify me.
- Could the TP-Link Router, which is between my PC and the cable modem, be hiding my identity by putting everything in an additional Ethernet data frame?
- Is Ubuntu (KDE) simply incompatible with systems that were designed for MS Windows?
- Is Brave Browser hiding my identity from the outside world?
- Could the problem be XFinity? I know that the signal intensity that I get from XFinity is kind of low. There are times when I must restart my XFinity service, because the XFinity server dropped me. (The server could no longer see me, because the signal was too low.) Perhaps I cannot be identified because of a poor signal quality.
Thanks.
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