This is probably not the right community but I haven’t found a better one.

So I watched a video from Seytonic where he mentiond that some malware creates a windows link with the name of the usb on a usb. So I checked my usb because I remembered that I had to click 2 times on my usb to opened it. I found a link that contained cmd.exe and a name of a file next to it. Upload to the virustotal showed Raspberry Roblin worm.

I use Linux but my familly uses windows so I will have to go through all familly computers and remove the worm. Where can I find info how to remove this specific worm - Raspberry Roblin? On google I found a description about how the worm works but not specific files it creates and how to remove it.

The first page that shows up is microsoft.com and it says that windows defender detects the worm, but clearly it doesnt.

Edit: The worm was on one computer and it did not have windows defender installed. Seems like malware removed it and also disabled automatic updates. I installed MalwareBytes and sucessfully removed the worm :)

  • TCB13@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    And here I was under the impression that using USB storage for anything else than installing operating systems was a thing of the past.

      • Dave@lemmy.nz
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        8 months ago

        Personally, most stuff is in cloud storage. For local stuff I use syncthing.

        But for the average person, I’d expect using iCloud, Google Drive, Onedrive, or Dropbox and then creating a shareable link for the other person.

        I also can’t remember the last time I used a USB drive for anything other than installing an OS.

      • sorter_plainview@lemmy.today
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        8 months ago

        Syncthing and LocalSend.

        Syncthing is used if it is not a one time transfer. LocalSend is mainly for one time transfer. LocalSend needs things to be in the same network. The same WiFi router is enough. Syncthing can send files over the internet also.

        There are browser based alternatives like ShareDrop . These tools are not as reliable as Syncthing and LocalSend, especially when it comes to single large files (more than a few GBs), like ISOs.

        For one time transfer over the internet, another handy tool is Croc . This one also suffers from the large file related issues.

      • u/lukmly013 💾 (lemmy.sdf.org)@lemmy.sdf.org
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        8 months ago

        If I want to quickly share something from my phone, I use NGINX in Termux with autoindex enabled.

        No need for anything else than browser on client-side.
        Actually, on Play store there’s also a simple GUI app called “Simple HTTP server”, but NGINX feels fancier.

        Just a tip if you want to try this:
        By default, error logs are kept. One source of errors is interface suddenly disappearing (i.e. your phone got disconnected from network). This error will be logged as quickly as it can be.
        What happened (when this occurred)? I found my phone stuck in bootloop. The error log filled internal storage to the last byte causing Android system to crash and unable to reboot, which it tried again, again, again,… Bootloop. I just found my pocket suddenly feeling unreasonably hot.
        In my case, forcing it into recovery, turning it off from there and retrying boot up freed 17MB from somewhere, allowing the phone to boot up.
        Alternative to that would be a hard reset.

        Sounds crazy, but any app could fill the internal storage like that.

    • seaQueue@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      NVMe in a USB enclosure makes a pretty rad backup target a couple of times a week. The whole job is over and done in <2 minutes.

      • TCB13@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        Yes, that’s true but I’m no longer doing that. Everything sync to the NAS using Syncthing that in turn is set with file versioning and weekly snapshots.

    • Hanrahan@slrpnk.net
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      8 months ago

      All the time, right now copying 400 MB onto one as an eBook Calibre library backup.

      • Possibly linux@lemmy.zip
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        8 months ago

        That’s not a good practice as USBs aren’t designed for long term storage. Maybe build some sort of NAS.

        • Richard@lemmy.world
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          8 months ago

          Lol any kind of flash storage suffers from degradation over time, it doesn’t matter whether you attach a computer to it or not