I enter my password, and it tells me that I “need to change my password immediately”. It won’t let me use my account, unless I type in a new password or enter the old password 10 times or so.

After repeatedly entering the old password, it will eventually unlock my screen. However, the system date increases by a few hundred years and wifi stops working. Everything turns back to normal after rebooting.

This hasn’t happened for a while now, but it used to happen every few weeks. I find it really strange, both the system date and wifi bug, and the fact that I am demanded to change my password.

Did this happen to anyone else, and does anyone know what and who might have caused this? I am curious.

(The distro is debian 12 and the lock-screen/desktop-environment is GNOME 43.6)

    • Wildebeest@lemmy.mlOP
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      7 months ago

      I was going to reinstall soon to setup full disk encryption anyways. That is why I wanted to figure this out first. If this is a bug that can be fixed, then I will stay with debian and GNOME. If it is a design choice to regularly ask users to change their passwords, and it can’t be easily toggled off, I will have to look at other distros and/or desktop-environments

      • lemmyvore@feddit.nl
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        7 months ago

        You may want to fully test your RAM with memtest while you’re at it. Especially if you’re going to be using encryption.

      • acockworkorange@mander.xyz
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        7 months ago

        It looks like a bug in the malware, to be honest. I’d backup sensitive data and scrub the disk, while booting from a GParted live USB.