Excuse my grammar, but if it “ain’t” a malware or meant to be one, I’m sure as hell the malware coders must be envious of what “deepin” is capable of doing…!?!
That ain’t nothing for Linux, compared to Micro$oft mining the world for mone$ and more importantly…, the personal data. Linux will chew this up and and spit it out in no time!
Since my Manjaro is abducted by aliens, it doesn’t operate like a normal one. Meaning, if I remove the script I created, (if I don’t trigger an autostart for the script), OpenSnitch does not automatically start when Manjaro boots up to desktop theme.
Here is the output of systemctl status opensnitchd
● opensnitchd.service - Application firewall OpenSnitch
Loaded: loaded (/usr/lib/systemd/system/opensnitchd.service; enabled; preset: disabled)
Active: active (running) since Tue 2024-01-09 20:07:05 EST; 1h 17min ago
Docs: Home · evilsocket/opensnitch Wiki · GitHub
Main PID: 4368 (opensnitchd)
Tasks: 30 (limit: 38132)
Memory: 152.3M
CPU: 1min 3.303s
CGroup: /system.slice/opensnitchd.service
└─4368 /usr/bin/opensnitchd -rules-path /etc/opensnitchd/rules
I understood that you had previously made a custom script instead of opensnitchd.service, and that opensnitchd wasn’t initially enabled by the usual opensnitchd.service script.
Of course, this entire thread has been a big bag full of confusion, so, Aliens are as good an explanation as any, I suppose.