Hi Kuldeep,

I totally agree with Sudhwna that its easier to reinstall then to struggle
hard to clean the the system but for any reason if you cannot re-install and
u have to fix the same one then you can use some tools like ballistic and
others to judge the current state and try to find out the rootkits but again
you will always be in doubt of having some malicious things remaining on
system.


On Tue, Dec 7, 2010 at 11:47 PM, Sudhanwa Jogalekar
<sudhanwa....@gmail.com>wrote:

> Dear Kuldeep,
>
> Starting with a clean OS is always better. You are sure about the
> things you have installed and working for you.
>
> In the current scenario where there are many things running without
> authorization, there could be some traces of the same even if those
> things are stopped, cleaned.
>
> Moreover, something might be running (or execute later on some time)
> without your knowledge and doing some damage to somewhere else and you
> are to be blamed for it and go behind the bars!!
>
> As they say, prevention is better than cure !!!
>
> -Sudhanwa
>
>
>
> On Tue, Dec 7, 2010 at 9:40 PM, kuldeep kamboj <kuldeepk1...@gmail.com>
> wrote:
> > Hi mr raj mathur,
> > Im just very new to linux, so please dont mind about my question. But
> > reinstall of linux in case of hack dont look very good solution. Even in
> > case of windows we first try to recover system not to reinstall. Then how
> > can be justified to reinstall linux system in case of hack like that?
> >
> > On Dec 3, 2010 8:25 PM, "Karanbir Singh" <mail-li...@karan.org> wrote:
> >
> > On 12/03/2010 06:26 AM, abhishek jain wrote:
> >>
> >> can anyone here suggest me what should i do,
> >> i am...
> > You have already had a lot of good advice here, I'll add a few more
> things :
> >
> > - backup you data, and only your data
> >
> > - backup anything else you might want from the machine, but in a
> different
> > place to your data
> >
> > - Call and speak to the hosting company - make sure they understand its
> >  security issue, and treat it with a high priority; Make sure they know
> what
> > your level of linux competence is and how you can help them.
> >
> > - Insist on a new VM being installed for you. Dont try and clean this one
> > up, just get your data and make sure its destoyed
> >
> > - Take steps to make sure this does not happen again :)
> >
> > All the best.
> >
> > - KB
> >
> >
> >
> > _______________________________________________
> > Ilugd mailing list
> > Ilugd@lists.linux-delhi.org
> > htt...
> > _______________________________________________
> > Ilugd mailing list
> > Ilugd@lists.linux-delhi.org
> > http://frodo.hserus.net/mailman/listinfo/ilugd
> >
>
>
>
> --
>
> ~!~!~!~!~!~!~!~!~!~!~!~!~!~!~!~!~!~!~!~!~!~!
> www.projects4students.com
>
> _______________________________________________
> Ilugd mailing list
> Ilugd@lists.linux-delhi.org
> http://frodo.hserus.net/mailman/listinfo/ilugd
>



-- 
Satyajeet Singh (Martin)
(Linux Corporate Trainer)
Koenig-Solutions Pvt Ltd
(www.koenig-solutions.com)
09911547664
_______________________________________________
Ilugd mailing list
Ilugd@lists.linux-delhi.org
http://frodo.hserus.net/mailman/listinfo/ilugd

Reply via email to