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My first thought, of course, was that someone was trying to exploit a buffer overflow in whatever service they were ostensibly logging in to. After all, it looks like many real overflow attempts I've seen in the past. The machine is on a DSL line, so I'm in a neighborhood that gets hit a lot, though mostly with clumsy automated attacks like Code Red and Nimda. However, a quick look determined that the service in question was 'login', which is only running on the console! How could this be? My wife is at work, and wouldn't touch the server except under duress anyway. I'm at work, too, so there's nobody who should be in the house.
Oh, wait. We have cats. Many cats. Eight of them, in fact. (Well, three are 'foster' cats up for adoption from the local shelter.) Not only that, but two of them are very young kittens who are currently locked in my study until we can get them to a vet to be certified safe for the other felines in the house. And, apparently, they are wrestling on the keyboard ;)
There already exists software to lock a keyboard if it detects a cat hack:
[bitboost.com...]
What ever will they think of next? :) :)