ive never seen anything like this ... ive been using LINUX distros for about a year an never hav i seen this .......... about 15 minutes ago my laptop started going crazy .. opening tabs and applications by itself .. youTube .. facebook .. instagram .. all without me commanding it to ..... it also happened about 30 minutes before that too an jus like now its running ok but im afraid if this happens again that it will not stop if i do not attempt to @ least troubleshoot the problem .... PLEASE HELP
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Does the mouse move as well?
If So thendisconnect your wifi and/or your Ethernet cable. If it stops immediately after you do that then someone is connecting remotely to your machine. When it stops reconnect the Internet and install rkhunter and run it as root:
sudo rkhunter -c
If the weirdness continues after you disconnect the outside world then you may have a race condition. Very rare. Rename ~/.kde to ~/kde_old and then log out and log back in. Or, reboot. This will reset your KDE environment and you will have to reconfigure your desktop."A nation that is afraid to let its people judge the truth and falsehood in an open market is a nation that is afraid of its people.”
– John F. Kennedy, February 26, 1962.
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Originally posted by GreyGeek View PostDoes the mouse move as well?
If So thendisconnect your wifi and/or your Ethernet cable. If it stops immediately after you do that then someone is connecting remotely to your machine. When it stops reconnect the Internet and install rkhunter and run it as root:
sudo rkhunter -c
If the weirdness continues after you disconnect the outside world then you may have a race condition. Very rare. Rename ~/.kde to ~/kde_old and then log out and log back in. Or, reboot. This will reset your KDE environment and you will have to reconfigure your desktop.
i tried to run those commands but the terminal is saying COMMAND NOT FOUND
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You can use Dolphin, with hidden file checkbox checked, to rename ~/kde"A nation that is afraid to let its people judge the truth and falsehood in an open market is a nation that is afraid of its people.”
– John F. Kennedy, February 26, 1962.
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Left click on the KGear in the left side of the panel at the bottom of the screen. Left click on Systesm, and on that submenu click on Konsole. In Konsole type
sudo apt install rkhunter
and press the Enter key.
You will be asked for your home account password. Enter it and press the Enter key. After the installation is finished the Konsole input line will be available again. Type:
sudo rkhunter -c
and press the Enter key.
You can make sure you have the latest malware data file by issuing:
sudo rkhunter --update
in a Konsole.
You'll probably get a dozen or so warnings about certain files but you should get no warnings about trojans, rootkits, viruses or malware in general. The details of an rkhunter scan or kept in
/var/log/rkhunter.log
and you can browse it using
sudo cat /var/log/rkhunter.log | less
in a Konsole. "Less" allows you to scroll back and forth. You can use the copy and paste commands of the Konsole menu to pick out certain warnings that you can post here.
The odds are that you have no malware and that you have not been remotely compromised, i.e., hacked into. More than likely it is a configuration error or file corruption due to drive going south.
"A nation that is afraid to let its people judge the truth and falsehood in an open market is a nation that is afraid of its people.”
– John F. Kennedy, February 26, 1962.
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Comment
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Originally posted by GreyGeek View PostLeft click on the KGear in the left side of the panel at the bottom of the screen. Left click on Systesm, and on that submenu click on Konsole. In Konsole type
sudo apt install rkhunter
and press the Enter key.
You will be asked for your home account password. Enter it and press the Enter key. After the installation is finished the Konsole input line will be available again. Type:
sudo rkhunter -c
and press the Enter key.
You can make sure you have the latest malware data file by issuing:
sudo rkhunter --update
in a Konsole.
You'll probably get a dozen or so warnings about certain files but you should get no warnings about trojans, rootkits, viruses or malware in general. The details of an rkhunter scan or kept in
/var/log/rkhunter.log
and you can browse it using
sudo cat /var/log/rkhunter.log | less
in a Konsole. "Less" allows you to scroll back and forth. You can use the copy and paste commands of the Konsole menu to pick out certain warnings that you can post here.
The odds are that you have no malware and that you have not been remotely compromised, i.e., hacked into. More than likely it is a configuration error or file corruption due to drive going south.
i have done what u asked an the terminal is telling me this ..... One or more warnings have been found while checking the system.Please check the log file (/var/log/rkhunter.log)
what do u suggest i do now mr grey Geek ??
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Originally posted by akqj10 View Posti have done what u asked an the terminal is telling me this ..... One or more warnings have been found while checking the system.Please check the log file (/var/log/rkhunter.log)
what do u suggest i do now mr grey Geek ??
So, using Dolphin, navigate to the hidden file under your home account called ~/.kde (The "~/" is recognized by bash as shorthand for "/home/youraccountname/"), so the full path is
/home/whateveryouraccountnameis/.kde
Right mouse on it and choose "rename". Rename it to .kde_old
/home/whateveryouraccountnameis/.kde_old
Then reboot."A nation that is afraid to let its people judge the truth and falsehood in an open market is a nation that is afraid of its people.”
– John F. Kennedy, February 26, 1962.
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