Mahmoud Khalil can travel freely around the U.S. as he fights his deportation case, judge rules
Mahmoud Khalil can travel freely around the U.S. as he fights his deportation case, judge rules
A federal judge lifted restrictions that limited his travel to New York, New Jersey, Washington, D.C., Louisiana and Michigan.The Associated Press (NBC News)
From Long Island to the Baltics: Drop Site Investigation Reveals New Details About Canary Mission's Operations
cross-posted from: lemmy.ml/post/37691732
Jacqueline Sweet
Oct 16, 2025
When Canary Mission began “doxxing” people for expressing pro-Palestine views a decade ago, the shadowy group mostly found traction among pro-Israel advocates who lobbied, with mixed success, to put a blacklist into effect. The group’s dossiers on activists and students led to firings, harassment, and death threats against its targets. Canary Mission has since risen to become an influential organ in President Donald Trump’s deportation machine, and its accumulated dossiers are now used by U.S. federal authorities and have led to immigration arrests of students.Canary Mission issued a statement in April that it did not actively share its dossiers with the Trump administration: “Our investigations of anti-U.S. and antisemitic extremists are all publicly available on our website.” In July, however, according to new court testimony, Peter Hatch, a senior official in ICE’s Homeland Security Investigations, testified that “most” of the names on a list of students for his agency to investigate came from Canary Mission’s website.
From Long Island to the Baltics: Drop Site Investigation Reveals New Details About Canary Mission's Operations
Jacqueline Sweet
Oct 16, 2025
When Canary Mission began “doxxing” people for expressing pro-Palestine views a decade ago, the shadowy group mostly found traction among pro-Israel advocates who lobbied, with mixed success, to put a blacklist into effect. The group’s dossiers on activists and students led to firings, harassment, and death threats against its targets. Canary Mission has since risen to become an influential organ in President Donald Trump’s deportation machine, and its accumulated dossiers are now used by U.S. federal authorities and have led to immigration arrests of students.Canary Mission issued a statement in April that it did not actively share its dossiers with the Trump administration: “Our investigations of anti-U.S. and antisemitic extremists are all publicly available on our website.” In July, however, according to new court testimony, Peter Hatch, a senior official in ICE’s Homeland Security Investigations, testified that “most” of the names on a list of students for his agency to investigate came from Canary Mission’s website.
From Long Island to the Baltics: Drop Site Investigation Reveals New Details About Canary Mission's Operations
Drop Site uncovered new information about individuals, donor networks, and businesses helping Canary Mission, a pro-Israel organization serving the U.S.'s deportation and repression efforts.Jacqueline Sweet (Drop Site News)
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My computer randomly freezes, but only on my Linux drive. How do I even begin troubleshooting this?
It started freezing maybe a month or two ago. It happens anytime between a few seconds after the OS loads, to hours or days later. I do not recall downloading anything around when this issue began that could be suspect.
I've put off fixing this because I have no idea how to even begin troubleshooting it. Internet searches for "Linux freezes" returns practically countless potential problems.
What are some recommendations? I have my root directory on a 30 GB partition separate from my home directory, which I think makes reinstalling my base image (Debian) easy without losing personal data, so that's an option. Maybe there's a system log file that would provide some insight?
I'm Linux dumb so please teach me how to fish!
I'll add that my Windows install (on a separate drive) doesn't freeze, and my Linux install is on a new Samsung drive that didn't report issues, so the problems unlikely hardware related.
02:05 18OCT: Thanks for all the quick responses, a lot of helpful suggestions so far. I should clarify that "my computer freezes" means it is 100% unresponsive until it is rebooted. Ctrl+alt+del spam or changing terminal sessions when its frozen does not get a response. The last few entries in my most recent journalctl boot outputs are different from one another, and the I did not see any errors. For now, I'll boot a live USB and let it sit for while, see if it crashes again.
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More than 20 states sue EPA over canceled grants for solar power
During the Trump administration, the Environmental Protection Agency canceled a $7 billion program aimed at making solar power accessible to low-income households.
More than 20 states sued the Environmental Protection Agency on Thursday, challenging the agency’s decision to cancel a $7 billion program that aimed to make solar power accessible to low-income households.
The program, called “Solar For All,” was established in 2022 under the Inflation Reduction Act and had appropriated grants to deploy rooftop and community solar projects. It was part of the Biden administration’s push to reduce carbon pollution and was supposed to make solar power more accessible to nearly a million additional U.S. households.
But in August, the EPA announced that the program had been canceled and withdrew about 90% of grant funds from the accounts in which states had received the awards, according to the lawsuit.
More than 20 states sue EPA over canceled solar power grants
More than 20 states sued the EPA on Thursday, challenging its cancelation of a $7 billion program that aimed to make solar power accessible to low-income households.Evan Bush (NBC News)
Hackers Dox Hundreds of DHS, ICE, FBI, and DOJ Officials
“I want my MONEY MEXICO,” a user of the Scattered LAPSUS$ Hunters Telegram channel, which is a combination of a series of other hacking group names associated with the Com, posted on Thursday. The message was referencing a claim from the DHS that Mexican cartels have begun offering thousands of dollars for doxing agents. The U.S. government has not provided any evidence for this claim.
404 Media reviewed multiple spreadsheets posted in the group’s Telegram channel. One contained the alleged personal information of 680 DHS officials; another contained data on more than 170 FBI email addresses and their owners; and the third contained the apparent personal information of more than 190 Department of Justice officials.
China Is Totally Crushing Trump’s Fossil Fuel Dream, With Agrivoltaics
US President Donald Trump sailed into the White House on a tide of cash from his fossil energy donors. However, he and they have been caught napping. The global renewable energy transition is still gathering steam and expanding into new areas......The next step is to introduce farming activities between the rows of solar panels. That’s a win-win for solar development on marginal lands, where the beneficial impact of partial shade can introduce, or re-introduce, farming to areas that were previously unproductive...
...Trump made a lot of promises to farmers on his way to the White House, but instead they got market-killing tariffs, crippling inflation, and worker shortages alongside a fresh wave of climate impacts. The income from solar leases can be a lifeline for struggling farmers, crops or no crops...
...“At the 310 MW Zhundong project, this platform improved alfalfa yields beneath panels by 20% while cutting irrigation demand by 15%,” the company states.
“In Anhui’s Jinzhai pilot upgrade, motorized adjustable mounts boosted camellia oilseed yields by 30% and raised solar efficiency by 8%, achieving genuine ‘dual harvests’ of agriculture and energy,” they add...
With Agrivoltaics, China Is Crushing Trump's Fossil Fuel Dreams
Bifacial solar panels are among the new technologies at work to maximize the land use efficiency of agrivoltaic systems.Tina Casey (CleanTechnica)
Nation-state hackers deliver malware from “bulletproof” blockchains - Ars Technica
Some excerpts:
Since February, Google researchers have observed two groups turning to a newer technique to infect targets with credential stealers and other forms of malware. The method, known as EtherHiding, embeds the malware in smart contracts, which are essentially apps that reside on blockchains for Ethereum and other cryptocurrencies. Two or more parties then enter into an agreement spelled out in the contract. When certain conditions are met, the apps enforce the contract terms in a way that, at least theoretically, is immutable and independent of any central authority.
- The decentralization prevents takedowns of the malicious smart contracts because the mechanisms in the blockchains bar the removal of all such contracts.
- Similarly, the immutability of the contracts prevents the removal or tampering with the malware by anyone.
- Transactions on Ethereum and several other blockchains are effectively anonymous, protecting the hackers’ identities.
- Retrieval of malware from the contracts leaves no trace of the access in event logs, providing stealth
- The attackers can update malicious payloads at anytime
Creating or modifying smart contracts typically cost less than $2 per transaction, a huge savings in terms of funds and labor over more traditional methods for delivering malware.
Layered on top of the EtherHiding Google observed was a social-engineering campaign that used recruiting for fake jobs to lure targets, many of whom were developers of cryptocurrency apps or other online services. During the screening process, candidates must perform a test demonstrating their coding or code-review skills. The files required to complete the tests are embedded with malicious code.
Nation-state hackers deliver malware from “bulletproof” blockchains
Malicious payloads stored on Ethereum and BNB blockchains are immune to takedowns.Dan Goodin (Ars Technica)
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Earth’s Oceans Lose Some of Their Luster | New research reveals that a key biological carbon pump is weakening, threatening ecosystems and the climate.
Earth’s Oceans Lose Some of Their Luster - Inside Climate News
New research reveals that a key biological carbon pump is weakening, threatening ecosystems and the climate.Inside Climate News
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Billionaire Marc Benioff apologizes for saying troops should be deployed to San Francisco
Billionaire Marc Benioff apologizes for saying troops should be deployed to San Francisco
Salesforce CEO faced intensifying backlash after saying national guard will make California city saferSam Levin (The Guardian)
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The Rise And Fall Of Vibe Coding: The Reality Of AI Slop
- YouTube
Profitez des vidéos et de la musique que vous aimez, mettez en ligne des contenus originaux, et partagez-les avec vos amis, vos proches et le monde entier.www.youtube.com
UK Government 'doing everything' to overturn Maccabi Tel Aviv fan ban at Aston Villa match
The government has said it is "doing everything in our power" to overturn a ban on Maccabi Tel Aviv fans attending a football match in Birmingham and is exploring what additional resources could be required.
On Thursday, Aston Villa said the city's Safety Advisory Group (SAG) decided that fans of the Israeli club should not be permitted to attend the Europa League fixture on 6 November over safety concerns.
Facing mounting pressure to resolve the situation, the government said it was working with police and exploring what additional resources are required.
Government 'doing everything' to overturn Maccabi Tel Aviv fan ban at Aston Villa match
It is working with police and exploring what additional resources are required to allow all fans to attend.Euan O Byrne Mulligan (BBC News)
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Government 'doing everything' to overturn Maccabi Tel Aviv fan ban at Aston Villa match
The government has said it is "doing everything in our power" to overturn a ban on Maccabi Tel Aviv fans attending a football match in Birmingham and is exploring what additional resources could be required.
On Thursday, Aston Villa said the city's Safety Advisory Group (SAG) decided that fans of the Israeli club should not be permitted to attend the Europa League fixture on 6 November over safety concerns.
Facing mounting pressure to resolve the situation, the government said it was working with police and exploring what additional resources are required.
Government 'doing everything' to overturn Maccabi Tel Aviv fan ban at Aston Villa match
It is working with police and exploring what additional resources are required to allow all fans to attend.Euan O Byrne Mulligan (BBC News)
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‘Political opposition is not rebellion’: Appeals court rejects Trump’s rationale for Chicago troop deployment
The court also rebuffed the administration’s argument that judges have no power to review the president’s decisions to federalize the National Guard.
A federal appeals court has extended an order blocking Donald Trump from deploying National Guard troops in Chicago, saying the administration is unable to show that there is an organized rebellion nor that officials are otherwise unable to uphold law and order in the city.
The ruling on Thursday from a three-judge panel of the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals extends a previous order that allowed Trump to federalize certain National Guard troops but blocked him from deploying troops in the city.
The panel — which consisted of a Trump appointee, an Obama appointee and a George H. W. Bush appointee — also rejected the administration’s argument that federal courts have no power to review a president’s underlying determinations in deciding to federalize troops. That question of judicial authority has cropped up in several similar lawsuits challenging deployments in Democrat-run cities.
https://www.politico.com/news/2025/10/16/trump-national-guard-chicago-ruling-00612918
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CEOs of Wells Fargo and Pfizer caution the U.S. could lose its edge to China without innovation
CEOs of Wells Fargo and Pfizer caution the U.S. could lose its edge to China without innovation
Speaking at CNBC's Invest in America Forum, the CEOs said the U.S. still leads in many sectors, but inconsistent policy and underinvestment is ceding ground.Luke Fountain (CNBC)
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orrori del picci che fa rumore di volo in corso dalla ventola non identificata
Ah, dolce… orrori oltre ogni umana comprensione!!! Questa è la mia onestissima reazione a quando poco fa, a caso, ho sentito la ventola del PC fisso (e non mi è chiaro se quella del case, o quella della CPU) diventare inspiegabilmente un elicottero dopo aver risvegliato la tale maledetta macchina dallo sleep… e la cosa […]
CEOs of Wells Fargo and Pfizer caution the U.S. could lose its edge to China without innovation
CEOs of Wells Fargo and Pfizer caution the U.S. could lose its edge to China without innovation
Speaking at CNBC's Invest in America Forum, the CEOs said the U.S. still leads in many sectors, but inconsistent policy and underinvestment is ceding ground.Luke Fountain (CNBC)
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Luckily the US is dismantling its innovation engines just in time!
Wait—what did you say is happening?
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C’mon Nobel Committee, Zhu Rongji is 96, do the right thing!
C’mon Nobel Committee, Zhu Rongji is 96, do the right thing! - Asia Times
Mama, put my guns in the groundI can’t shoot them anymoreThat long black cloud is comin’ downI feel like I’m knockin’ on heaven’s doorbob Dylan, NobelHan Feizi (Asia Times)
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4chan faces UK ban after refusing to pay ‘stupid’ fine
4chan faces UK ban after refusing to pay ‘stupid’ fine
Ofcom says website has ‘flagrantly failed to engage’ with Online Safety ActAnthony Cuthbertson (The Independent)
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China mass producing quantum radars to track US stealth jets
China mass producing quantum radars to track US stealth jets
While stealth jets have various tricks to evade traditional radars, the quantum radars might prove to be a game-changer in a war between the US and China.Abhishek Bhardwaj (Interesting Engineering)
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reshared this
for people like me wondering, what's a quantum radar:
They send out photons whose quantum properties changes once they hit the stealth aircraft.Once the single unit photons reach the radar after hitting the stealth aircraft, they are studied, thereby revealing the position of the stealth jets.
so far all the information we have (from the article) beings with "China claims"
I call bs and propaganda campaign but will see.
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This article essentually summarizes a report from China but doesn't give the report's title, authors, or web link. This whole article is hearsay without providing the source material.
Also, why does it read like it was written by a middle schooler with zero technical understanding? You'd expect better quality from a website named "Interesting Engineering."
"They send out photons whose quantum properties changes once they hit the stealth aircraft. This means that even the false signals generated by the aircraft would not be able to match the properties of the photons emitted by quantum radars."
Like, what does that even mean? I would check the source material, but I can't because we're not told what it is.
Is all journalism this bad these days?
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Inside the web infrastructure revolt over Google’s AI Overviews - Ars Technica
It could be a consequential act of quiet regulation. Cloudflare, a web infrastructure company, has updated millions of websites’ robots.txt files in an effort to force Google to change how it crawls them to fuel its AI products and initiatives.We spoke with Cloudflare CEO Matthew Prince about what exactly is going on here, why it matters, and what the web might soon look like. But to get into that, we need to cover a little background first.
The new change, which Cloudflare calls its Content Signals Policy, happened after publishers and other companies that depend on web traffic have cried foul over Google’s AI Overviews and similar AI answer engines, saying they are sharply cutting those companies’ path to revenue because they don’t send traffic back to the source of the information.
There have been lawsuits, efforts to kick-start new marketplaces to ensure compensation, and more—but few companies have the kind of leverage Cloudflare does. Its products and services back something close to 20 percent of the web, and thus a significant slice of the websites that show up on search results pages or that fuel large language models.
“Almost every reasonable AI company that’s out there is saying, listen, if it’s a fair playing field, then we’re happy to pay for content,” Prince said. “The problem is that all of them are terrified of Google because if Google gets content for free but they all have to pay for it, they are always going to be at an inherent disadvantage.”
This is happening because Google is using its dominant position in search to ensure that web publishers allow their content to be used in ways that they might not otherwise want it to.
Inside the web infrastructure revolt over Google’s AI Overviews
Cloudflare CEO Matthew Prince is making sweeping changes to force Google’s hand.Samuel Axon (Ars Technica)
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Frieren - Capitolo 17
Per cercare di evitare il peggio, questa volta i tre soggettoni dell'avventura si sono effettivamente preparati decentemente...
Frieren - Capitolo 16
Dopo la visita di Draht a Frieren, le cose si mettono male un po' per tutti in un lampo... e per colpa di chi, se non dei demoni? Ebbene...
The ‘Domestic Terrorists’ Who Weren’t: Chicago Protest Cases Collapse in Court
The ‘Domestic Terrorists’ Who Weren’t: Chicago Protest Cases Collapse in Court
Ever since the Trump Administration started to blitz Chicago with a surge of federal immigration enforcement, it’s touted the arrests of people who’ve gathered…Josh Kovensky (TPM - Talking Points Memo)
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Frieren - Capitolo 15
Ciò che in questo nuovo capitolo immediatamente si scopre è che, mentre i demoni servi di Alba hanno ovviamente le loro intenzioni nascoste...
Gaddafi’s Ghost Haunts French Ex-President Sarkozy - CovertAction Magazine
Gaddafi’s Ghost Haunts French Ex-President Sarkozy - CovertAction Magazine
The criminal case of ex-France President Nicolas Sarkozy touches the historical tensions between Muammar Gaddafi's Libya and Western powers, particularly France.Nicholas Reed (CovertAction Magazine)
Visual glitching on fedora 42
Come scrivere in una pagina web
Non possiamo scrivere in una pagina web usando direttamente la tastiera come facciamo in un documento qualsiasi, ma dobbiamo prima creare un documento HTML e poi salvare con estensione .htm o.html. Se si tratta di un testo dove non compaiono accenti, apici, pedici, apriamo l’editor e poi digitiamo il testo con la tastiera, se nel testo compaiono accenti o apici e pedici allora abbiamo bisogno degli accenti e quindi delle entity che sono costrutti SGML; nel caso di apici e pedici abbiamo bisogno di tag che sevono proprio a questo e che sono testo oppuretesto.
Facciamo degli esempi
Voglio creare una pagina contenente il seguente testo:
L’energia cinetica di un corpo è l’energia di movimento del corpo.
In questa riga di testo compare una e con l’accento. Come faccio a scriverla nella pagina web? Uso la entity è
West instructed Russia on freedom of speech for years, now it wants to ban it — Putin
West instructed Russia on freedom of speech for years, now it wants to ban it — Putin
The Russian leader noted that the reaction of Western elites on a new interpretation of events was primitive and straightforwardTASS
RT a ‘voice of truth’ despite West’s attempts to silence it – Lavrov
RT a ‘voice of truth’ despite West’s attempts to silence it – Lavrov
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov has congratulated RT on two decades of broadcasting successRT
Russian journalist killed by Ukrainian drone
Russian journalist killed by Ukrainian drone
A Russian war correspondent has been killed in a Ukrainian drone attack, his employer has saidRT
Bodycam: ICE Officer Arrested for DUI w/ Kids in Car
- YouTube
Profitez des vidéos et de la musique que vous aimez, mettez en ligne des contenus originaux, et partagez-les avec vos amis, vos proches et le monde entier.www.youtube.com
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db2
in reply to GooseFinger • • •One thing that I did when distro hopping was to have /home be separate like you have, but I would back it up elsewhere and let it be a clean start which I could bring over what I wanted from the backup.
It was easier than hunting down which dotfile the new distro didn't like.
Snot Flickerman
in reply to GooseFinger • • •the
/var/log/
folder would be the best place to start.A. If possible, do this for multiple instances of this happening
syslog
and look at the times noted above. Look for any relevant errors being thrown by the system at these times.just_another_person
in reply to GooseFinger • • •1) Would be good to know the hardware you're working, especially if it's a laptop and the model.
2) What kind of freeze is this? Black screen, frozen graphics, mouse frozen...etc. Also whether is time-bssed, and how long it takes to freeze.
3) As a test, boot, and play music continuously until it freezes. Does the sound stop as well?
In all practical reality, Linux takes A LOT to topple over like this. It certainly would fair better than Windows with wonky hardware, but if it's a laptop for example, maybe your fans aren't working and therefore it's a heat. Just try and define what kind of freeze it is first.
GooseFinger
in reply to just_another_person • • •I'm running a desktop with relatively new hardware. Amd 5900x CPU, AMD 7900 GRE GPU, 32 GB ram, plenty of space and good airflow for stable thermals.
The freeze is definitely at least frozen desktop and mouse/keyboard. I also tried changing terminal sessions after a freeze tonight and this had no effect, so it's probably the whole system?
Good idea with playing sound, I will try this on my next boot.
IsoKiero
in reply to GooseFinger • • •AnimaLibera
in reply to GooseFinger • • •Command line is your friend. It might not seem like it at first, but it is very helpful.
Use the
journalctl
command in a terminal.Command Purpose Example
journalctl -u [SERVICE] View logs for a specific systemd unit/service. journalctl -u nginx.service
journalctl -b Show logs from the current boot. journalctl -b
journalctl -b -[N] Show logs from a previous boot (ee.g., -1 for the last boot). journalctl -b -1
journalctl --list-boots List all recorded boot sessions. journalctl --list-boots
journalctl -p [PRIORITY] Filter by priority level or a range. Levels are 0 (emerg) to 7 (debug). journalctl -p err..warning (shows errors, critical, alerts, and warnings)
journalctl --since="[TIME]" --until="[TIME]" Filter by time range. Supports absolute (YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS) and relative times (1 hour ago, yesterday). journalctl --since "20 min ago"
journalctl -n [LINES] Show only the last N entries. journalctl -n 20
journalctl -k Show only kernel messages (equivalent to dmesg output). journalctl -k
I spent a couple of days trying to figure out why I couldn't install any variant of Arch Linux or Fedora Linux on my laptop. That command helped me narrow things down.
AnimaLibera
in reply to GooseFinger • • •Snot Flickerman
in reply to AnimaLibera • • •I mean, potentially not that quickly if they have to wait days for it to happen. Good low-investment-of-personal-time-and-effort suggestion though.
AnimaLibera
in reply to Snot Flickerman • • •ozymandias117
in reply to GooseFinger • • •Maybe easier to another suggestion, you're probably using a systemd based distros -
journalctl -b -1
will show you the logs from the previous boot, so you could check that after resetting to see if anything was loggedFor some other ideas to narrow down where the issue is...
If you're stuck in the frozen state, you can Ctrl+alt+delete 7+ times quickly to tell systemd to try to restart the system. If this works, it means init was still able to process messages
If that doesn't work, you could enable Magic Sysrq Key (if disabled in your distro), and then use the key sequence REISUB to try to see if the kernel is still responding and can reset the system
Korkki
in reply to ozymandias117 • • •Less destructive way would be to try to open a terminal session with ctr+alt+f3 (or any f key) If it's only the gui that's frozen. Makes it also possible to troubleshoot things from there. I had this issue recently. AMD core boost caused random freezes to kwin.
GooseFinger
in reply to Korkki • • •Agility0971
in reply to GooseFinger • • •Explain how "freezed" are the system
- is the freeze sudden or does the system gets progressively slower?
- does the mouse cursor respond?
- does the audio keep playing in the background? does it repeat a short time interval over and over again?
- does the system respond to ping requests?
- does the system accept incoming ssh connections?
- how random is it? what time interval?
- is the location random (think consistent wifi / bluetooth devices nearby)
- is the freeze happening after going to sleep / hibernation / screen blank?
- does this happen if you aggressively open a lot of apps at the same time? Try it.
What to do before next system freeze
- update and upgrade the system
- create a working directory somewhere where you write down your findings. Does not have to be pretty or anything. Just for your own convenience.
- Configure REISUB. check files in
/etc/sysctl.d/*.conf
and look forkernel.sysrq=0
. Change it to 1.- Enable ctrl+alt+del spam reboot. Update
/etc/systemd/system.conf
so that you have a line looking like this:ctrl+alt+fN
where N in {1..12}. You should see a login prompt. Try the REISUB sequence. Press and hold alt+print screen (might require some fn key combination on a laptop) then press, hold and release following letters one at a time: R E I S U B. You should see kernel messages appear on the screen each time you press a button. Don't try to press them all at once or type them before the output is finished. Your system should reboot after this. Does it work?TCPKeepAlive=no
formy-faulty-pc
in your ssh config before connecting to avoid having the connection dropped. then runssh my-faulty-pc journalctl -b0 -k -f > waiting_for_crash.log
on another system that will capture the logreproduce
Here is the easiest part. Make the system hang. Preferably with reproducible steps.
System is now freezed
- Go quickly through the first list
- from the remote host that monitors the logs through ssh. You can close the ssh connection and inspect some of the last lines in the file. Don't upload it anywhere before sanitizing it to avoid doxing yourself.
- from the remote system try ssh and pinging.
- on the frozen host try ctrl+alt+del burst first
- then try REISUB combo if the burst didn't work.
What to do now
This part depends a bit on what the outcomes were. At least we'll know how "deep" the hang is and where it's worth modifying stuff.
You say in your post that you've tried ctrl+alt+del spam. But did you check that it works when the system is working as intended?
Edit: minor typo
GooseFinger
in reply to Agility0971 • • •Thanks for the comment.
It froze again tonight, I tried ctr+alt+del spam and nadda, no response.
I have not tried changing tty ctrl+alt+fn, but I will in the next session. Same with REISUB (not sure what this is yet).
My first guess for root cause was a ram leak, but my system monitor shows little activity when these crashes/freezes occur. Not that this is a perfect method of ruling this out, but my resource usage doesn't smell fishy at least.
Agility0971
in reply to GooseFinger • • •GooseFinger
in reply to Agility0971 • • •PriorityMotif
in reply to GooseFinger • • •GooseFinger
in reply to PriorityMotif • • •Xylight
in reply to GooseFinger • • •this is important, and will help you find solutions much more specific than just "system freeze"
journalctl -b -1
and scroll to the bottom. Look for any big red text, all of that will be very helpful to diagnose this issueOtherwise,
GooseFinger
in reply to Xylight • • •No red text from journalctl unfortunately. My last few sessions each end with different messages too. One is a KDE Connect warning, a few others echoing some commands I sent in the terminal, etc. No red errors.
The system freezes permanently, requiring a reboot.
I have an AMD GPU, and likely have OpenGL installed.
AllForTwo
in reply to GooseFinger • • •Which distro are you on?
Was there a kernel update recently by chance? Have you tried falling back to an earlier version? Got any timeshift backups?
GooseFinger
in reply to AllForTwo • • •Debian 12. When the freezing first started, I lied to myself saying it'll self-correct with time. I've since lost track of which timeshift backup to use. I am a silly fool.
And there was no kernel update afaik.
AllForTwo
in reply to GooseFinger • • •I suppose the logging from the Os there is the same as journalctl. I'm new to Linux, but I've done Hackintosh quite a bit, so a lot of similar commandlines and debugging. I digress.
Have you tried making a new user, booting from a live usb or booting into a different desktop environment? I feel those are the lowest hanging fruits where you can check if it hangs universally or just on your main user account. Would help narrow it down a little if you haven't been able to spot anything in logs.
SayCyberOnceMore
in reply to GooseFinger • • •My guess... you have some hardware that Linux and Windows communicate with differently.
Either the hardware or the Linux driver is potentially broken.
If you're able to (hard with a laptop, I know), disconnect as many things as you can - even take out the Windows hardrive - and see if that helps.
For all the suggestions about the journal, you will see random things at the very end, but see if there's anything common from earlier in the boot process.
sudo journalctl -xe
may be helpful here.-
sudo
to ensure you're seeing the entire journal-
x
adds additional explanations-
e
jumps to the end (again, probably look further back)Lemmchen
in reply to GooseFinger • • •When your system freezes, can you still switch TTYs with e.g. Ctrl+Alt+F3 to debug?
On one of my systems Plasma occasionally hangs, but I can still switch to a different tty and kill it.
MonkderVierte
in reply to GooseFinger • • •udevadm monitor
) and lsusb/lspci might be helpful too. Places to look at (only if you fiddled with them):/etc/fstab
for mount options and do you maybe have a weird rule in/etc/udev
,/etc/modprobe.d
or/etc/sysctl
?polle
in reply to GooseFinger • • •DigitalDilemma
in reply to GooseFinger • • •Others have already given some good advice, but rather than let it sit and wait to error, use the program "stress"
It'll work specific components hard which can help locate whether it's a CPU/Heat problem, or Memory, or disk.
And if it still fails on random things, take a long hard look at your PSU and measure voltages if you can. But if everything else checks out, motherboard could be it. Tiny cracks/dry joints, even inside the pcb layers, can lead to occasional problems that come and go with heat or vibration and are impossible to accurately diagnose beyond swapping it out.
davetortoise
in reply to DigitalDilemma • • •DigitalDilemma
in reply to davetortoise • • •I can understand that view, but I've personally experienced things where it absolutely can be this and I respectfully disagree with you. I think what OP describes is more likely to be hardware than the OS.
Firstly - different drive for linux. A dying drive can freeze and take down its host, regardless of OS.
Secondly, linux uses memory very differently to windows, especially in relation to caching the filesystem. Linux might be accessing memory that Windows doesn't get to.
We also don't know what loads OP puts on his computer when running windows and linux. Maybe he has windows to game with, or may he uses linux for LLM/compute work and runs it full tilt. Each may do very different things and tax different aspects of the hardware.
It's simply not safe to assume anything when diagnosing intermittent problems with hardware. The only reliable method is methodical testing and isolation.
davetortoise
in reply to DigitalDilemma • • •kuneho
in reply to GooseFinger • • •Unrelated, but I had something relatively similar once with my Inspiron 7520 laptop. In theory, that machine only supports 8GB of RAM, but technically I could put 16 into it and worked fine. Later I upgraded to a different machine and put this laptop aside, but sometimes I set it up if I go to friends place and need a PC to do some light multiplayer lan parties or such.
For a while, the laptop has a strange locking up issue when I booted 64 bit OSs. Or I don't know, after my testings, it seemed that booting a 64 bit OS would crash my machine sooner or later. Maybe even right after boot, maybe after when I logged in or used it for some time. Booting into Memtest also locked up eventually the laptop (but running the 32 bit version of Memtest didn't). Pulling out either memory stick (2x8GB) solved the issue, it worked with both sticks on both slots, if I used only one. The two sticks together on the other hand made my machine crash after boot, no matter which stick went to which slot.
Difference is that every OS did this, not just Debian, though Windows seemed to keep up longer in this case, but it also crashed on me.
Now I don't have this problem. It just... disappeared after not using the laptop for a while again.
So... if it's not software issue, maybe try to reseat your RAM sticks. Or use some compressed air to clean up the slots, maybe check the contacts of the sticks and clean them with some isopropyl and a soft brush.
It also can be storage issue, if your Windows install works fine on a different drive. Once I had an Ubuntu installed to the same laptop I mentioned and its HDD was failing hard, but the system kept up for a while, just had some really weird issues popping up here and there. But then eventually failed completely. Amongst the weird happenings, random freezes were also a thing with my bad HDD.
y0din
in reply to GooseFinger • • •There are many good answers here already, just wanted to add to it.
It sounds very much like what you’re seeing could be either a driver fault or a memory-related issue. Both can manifest as hard system freezes where nothing responds, not even Ctrl+Alt+Fx or SysRq. You mentioned this briefly before, and that still fits the pattern.
If it’s a driver issue, it’s often GPU or storage related. A kernel module crashing without proper recovery can hang the whole system—especially graphics drivers like NVIDIA or AMD, or low-level I/O drivers handling your SSD or SATA controller. Checking dmesg -T and journalctl -b -1 after reboot for GPU resets, I/O errors, or kernel oops messages might reveal clues.
If it’s memory pressure or the OOM killer, that can also lock a machine solid, depending on what’s being killed. When the kernel runs out of allocatable memory, it starts terminating processes to free RAM. If the wrong process goes first—say, something core to the display stack or a driver thread—you’ll see a full freeze. You can verify this by searching the logs for “Out of memory” or “Killed process” messages.
A failing DIMM or a bad memory map region could also behave like this, even if Windows seems fine. Linux tends to exercise RAM differently, especially with heavy caching and different scheduling. Running a memtest86+ overnight is worth doing just to eliminate that angle.
If your live USB sits idle for hours without freezing, that strongly hints it’s a driver or kernel module loaded in your main install, not a hardware fault. If it does freeze even from live media, you’re probably looking at a low-level memory or hardware instability.
The key next steps:
Check system logs after reboot for OOM or GPU-related kernel messages.
Run memtest86+ for several passes.
Try a newer (or older) kernel to rule out regression.
If it’s indeed a driver or OOM event, both would explain the “total lockup” behavior and why Windows remains unaffected. Linux’s memory management and driver model are simply less forgiving when something goes sideways.
Günther Unlustig 🍄
in reply to GooseFinger • • •I've had something similar a while ago. Trying a different distro or doing stuff on the software side didn't help.
What fixed the issue was getting a new hard drive because the old one was breaking down.
But maybe try other approaches first
FauxLiving
in reply to GooseFinger • • •If you’re not getting logs, try to use this: wiki.archlinux.org/title/Keybo…
Try a sync to disk (or some of the “kill all” commands) when it’s frozen. This is closer in function to ctrl alt del in windows.
Keyboard shortcuts - ArchWiki
wiki.archlinux.orgTiempo
in reply to GooseFinger • • •wiki.archlinux.org/title/Intel…
Go to 6.15, there is your solution. I had the same very problem and with this it got solved.
Intel graphics - ArchWiki
wiki.archlinux.orgcommunism
in reply to GooseFinger • • •Ryzen - ArchWiki
wiki.archlinux.orgqaatloz
in reply to GooseFinger • • •ms.lane
in reply to GooseFinger • • •You've mentioned in the thread you've on Debian 12 - have you installed mesa from backports?
The version of mesa on 12 is is 22.3.6 which is before the release of the 7900GRE and only very early RDNA3 support.
bookworm-backports has 25.0.7
If you read through backports.debian.org/Instructi… you can enable the backports repo then just reinstall mesa (or dist-upgrade)
Instructions
backports.debian.orgMatt
in reply to GooseFinger • • •https://forum.guncadindex.com/u/unexpected
in reply to GooseFinger • • •Is your swap big enough? Some installers default to only 1gig. That isn't big enough normally.
If it fills the ram and the swap, it will cause what you are seeing. Typically the suggestion is a little more than however much ram you have. Personally I set it at either 16 or 32gigs or more. Depending on the machine and what I intend on doing with it and how much drive space I have available.
You can keep a system monitor open (or top, htop etc) and keep an eye on it when you're doing something ram hungry, like having a bunch of browser tabs open or whatever. If it freezes and you look over and see the ram usage pegged to the top, that will suggest that that is your problem.
deathbird
in reply to • • •16gb seems huge.
Is there some sort of rubric you follow that leads you to that figure?
HaraldvonBlauzahn
in reply to GooseFinger • • •You can install a memory stress test and run it from the boot menu (memtest86).
Could also be a CPU overheating problem and this can be caused by a defect CPU fan. On older systems, that could cause a specific signal when compiling the kernel.
Other potential cause could be file system corruption. Good idea to back up your stuff.
☂️-
in reply to GooseFinger • • •Longpork3
in reply to GooseFinger • • •