I get what you're saying Dominik, and I agree with you. There are countless other ways a compromised environment can target a password manager. Expecting KeePass (or any password manager) to be immune in such situations is unrealistic. I merely provided an alternative for OP. Even if that alternative is not vulnerable for this specific attack, a compromised PC can and will find other ways to steal his passwords. But similar to how KeePass protects against keyloggers, this would be one thing less...
https://keepassxc.org/ As far as I can tell, KeePassXC doesn't have this vulnerability.
See this bugreport for a (temporary) solution: https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=861169
Also seeing this behaviour with 2.11.0~alpha-10 on Debian stretch. OpenDKIM seems to ignore configurations in /etc/opendkim.conf when started with service opendkim start. It creates a unix socket even though I specified an inet socket. When executing opendkim without any arguments, the socket is created successfully, as James showed.
Hello, I am disappointed that PyFANN is currently not available for FANN 2.2.0. I...