Ask HN: How to tell if my Linux server has been infected by a mouse
Hey HN,
I recently purchased a cheap mouse online and used my desktop Linux server USB port to charge it. Is there any change the mouse was malevolent, and is there any way I can make sure it didn't introduce a virus into the system?
Thanks!
11 comments
[ 0.23 ms ] story [ 20.2 ms ] threadI think I have only seen it in Windows but I don't know if that means linux cannot arbitrarily execute files hosted on a mouse, or if Razer skips the install because it has no compatible crapware.
Unlikely but possible.
The mouse merely presents itself as being from a certain manufacturer, and Windows asks the user if it should fetch the drivers (and any other bundled crapware Razer wants to load on there).
There is no installer payload inside the mouse.
This is extremely prevalent with a lot of smaller things, particularly noname Chinese brands. I have ordered and received things like wifi USB adapters and BT4 adapters that came preloaded with autorun malware (I don't enable autorun). Presumably because the master at the factory was already infected or something, if it isn't intentional.
Razer's might just be WU getting "official drivers", but this is 100% not part of WU, extremely common, and often available on Amazon through thousands of brand names (fake) originating from the same factory.
(At first I thought it was a joke, alluding to Linux users love touch typing at 120WPM and hate using a mouse, so any mouse peripheral is an 'infection').