There are some torrrents showing up with .lnk
extension (ex: movie.mp3.lnk, tvshow.mkv.lnk…) and automated software (Sonarr, Radarr, Lidarr, qBittorrent RSS Downloader) could pick those torrents (but not import).
These (fake) torrents include a .lnk
file that executes a script on your Windows
HOW TO exclude from download on qBittorrent.
-
Go to Options -> Downloads
-
Enable “Exclude file names”
-
Add patterns:
(one by line)
*.mp4.lnk
*.mp3.lnk
*.mkv.lnk
*.torrent.lnk
Or exclude all together: *.lnk
Example on VirusTotal https://www.virustotal.com/gui/file/e74f64df6ebaf3a1b6e3f42591eb6e87d2ac2828eb5a99fd8d3d82c140137fc9/detection
thanks Microsoft for hiding extensions by default!
Yes, but also whoever set the defaults for the *arr tools. Why would any filename with extra shit past the extensions you’re looking for be considered an acceptable result?
Tack $ on the end of your regex, for fucks sake.
Is not regex
https://github.com/qbittorrent/qBittorrent/pull/17106Examples
*.exe: filter ‘.exe’ file extension.
readme.txt: filter exact file name.
?.txt: filter ‘a.txt’, ‘b.txt’ but not ‘aa.txt’.
readme[0-9].txt: filter ‘readme1.txt’, ‘readme2.txt’ but not ‘readme10.txt’
When I read the title, I was thinking of something sophisticated such as hidden executable streams inside the MKV container (IIRC, it’s possible to append binary data other than audio, video or subtitles specifically inside a MKV). The “.lnk” trick only works in Windows and, even there, it’s easy to prevent: Windows Explorer > Options > Advanced > find and check “Always show extensions for files” (i can’t really remember the exact label for this option as I’m not a Windows user, but something like this will be there).
I use Arch btw
What if it executes and install Windows 11 on your machine!?