Full-stack observability with actually useful AI | Grafana Cloud
Our generous forever free tier includes the full platform, including the AI Assistant, for 3 users with 10k metrics, 50GB logs, and 50GB traces.
Built on open standards like Prometheus and OpenTelemetry, Grafana Cloud includes Kubernetes Monitoring, Application Observability, Incident Response, plus the AI-powered Grafana Assistant. Get started with our generous free tier today.
Create free account
Go From AI Idea to AI App Fast
One platform to build, fine-tune, and deploy ML models. No MLOps team required.
Access Gemini 3 and 200+ models. Build chatbots, agents, or custom models with built-in monitoring and scaling.
ttyrpld is a multi-OS kernel-level TTY keylogger and screenlogger with (a)synchronous replay support. It runs on Linux, Solaris, FreeBSD, NetBSD and OpenBSD.
A Linux kernel module to grab keys pressed in the keyboard, or a keylogger.
keysniffer was initially written with the US keyboard (and conforming laptops) in mind. By default it shows human-readable strings for the keys pressed. However, as keyboards evolved, more keys got added. So the module now supports a module parameter codes which shows the keycode shift_mask pair in hex (codes=1) or decimal (codes=2). You can lookup the keycodes in /usr/include/linux/input-event-codes.h.
The...
Lay a foundation for success with Tested Reference Architectures developed by Fortinet’s experts. Learn more in this white paper.
Moving to the cloud brings new challenges. How can you manage a larger attack surface while ensuring great network performance? Turn to Fortinet’s Tested Reference Architectures, blueprints for designing and securing cloud environments built by cybersecurity experts. Learn more and explore use cases in this white paper.
A simple keylogger written in python. It is primarily designed for backup purposes, but can be used as a stealth keylogger, too. It does not raise any trust issues, since it is a set of [relatively] short python scripts that you can easily examine.
Strokey is a small hardware keyboard logger saving all keystrokes into an EEPROM memory for later investigation. The device may get attached to any PS/2-keyboard by intercepting the cable, or get placed directly inside for maximum invisibility.
LKL is a userspace keylogger that runs under Linux on the x86 arch. LKL logs everything that passes through the hardware keyboard port (0x60). It translates keycodes to ASCII with a keymap file.