I just joined your list, and I've got some problems with my computer.
I have Ubuntu Hardy Heron OS, and I think that I have accidentally had a
keylogger and some other root kits installed on it.
I downloaded three root kit hunters with synaptic package manager, but I'm a
Linux/Ubuntu newbie,
Al G wrote:
I just joined your list, and I've got some problems with my computer.
BTW, it's a good idea to use more than one hunter. Another good
one is chkrootkit. Frisk also provides fprot which is rather
resource intensive on Linux, but which seems to do a fairly good
job. I also run
I believe in the most recent installations it will ask you for an
explicit installation path, i.e., /usr/local/bin or /usr/bin or
something. Otherwise it won't let you install. Not 100% sure on that but
I think that's right.
So if indeed you successfully installed it, just use the path you used
Hi,
I used rkhunter a couple of days ago by running in terminal as root rkhunter
-c --sk and came up with multiple file warnings, including that there was a
key logger installed. I had no indications of a rootkit, and I subsequently ran
chkrootkit and it also found no rootkits. I am running
Mark Misulich wrote:
Hi,
I used rkhunter a couple of days ago by running in terminal as root
rkhunter -c --sk and came up with multiple file warnings, including
that there was a key logger installed. I had no indications of a
Where is the key logger warning? I looked at your report, and
Mark Misulich wrote:
Hi,
Actually, the system looks pretty clean to me. The four files
/usr/bin/groups, /usr/bin/ldd, /sbin/chkconfig, and /sbin/ifup
are very slightly concerning. As I mentioned, they may simply
be scripts on your system, and informing rkhunter about your
package manager may
Hallo, Mark,
Du (munguanaweza) meintest am 02.12.08:
Hi,
-- quoting ---
Actually, the system looks pretty clean to me. The four files
/usr/bin/groups, /usr/bin/ldd, /sbin/chkconfig, and /sbin/ifup
are very slightly concerning. As I mentioned, they may simply
be scripts on your