On Wed, 2011-10-26 at 02:38 -0500, isobella wrote: > In my experience, the keylogger is invisible, and it run with other > applicatioons. What's more, most keyloggers are undetectable. While, I > know a very simple way to detect it. Type CTRL + ALT + DELETE, it will > open your Task Manager, Processes tab look for BKP. exe or AKL. exe, > if you find the BKP. AKL exe or. exe's why you have keylogger. > * Remembering that if you can not always detect Keylogger by CTRL + > ALT + DELETE. > A more general way to find unexpected processes is to run "ps -ef" from a terminal. Either pipe it into less: ps -ef |less where you can search on keywords or simply scroll through the list, or, if you already know the keyword, pipe it into grep: ps -ef | grep '\.exe' will show you all the .exe programs that are currently running. If you want to know more about a program, apropos and man are your friends: apropos wine man wine apropos shows one line describing anything that has your search term in the first line or its man page: $ apropos wine msiexec (1) - Wine MSI Installer notepad (1) - Wine text editor regedit (1) - Wine registry editor regsvr32 (1) - Wine DLL Registration Server wine (1) - run Windows programs on Unix wineboot (1) - perform Wine initialization, startup, and shutdown tasks winecfg (1) - Wine Configuration Editor wineconsole (1) - The Wine console winefile (1) - Wine File Manager winemine (1) - Wine Minesweeper game winepath (1) - Tool to convert Unix paths to/from Win32 paths wineserver (1) - the Wine server while typing "man wine" shows the whole man page. Martin