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Still not an acronym.
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Stephen Kitt
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Normally Linux Live images work off RAM and don't write anything to the disk, so it's extremely unlikely you could have left any traces.

In the distant past I remember there were some Linux LiveCDs that automatically enabled SWAPswap partitions and that could lead to information leakage, but now that you've shut the system down already, there's no way of knowing what your Live distribution might have touched.

Normally Linux Live images work off RAM and don't write anything to the disk, so it's extremely unlikely you could have left any traces.

In the distant past I remember there were some Linux LiveCDs that automatically enabled SWAP partitions and that could lead to information leakage, but now that you've shut the system down already, there's no way of knowing what your Live distribution might have touched.

Normally Linux Live images work off RAM and don't write anything to the disk, so it's extremely unlikely you could have left any traces.

In the distant past I remember there were some Linux LiveCDs that automatically enabled swap partitions and that could lead to information leakage, but now that you've shut the system down already, there's no way of knowing what your Live distribution might have touched.

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Artem S. Tashkinov
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Normally Linux Live images work off RAM and don't write anything to the disk, so it's extremely unlikely you could have left any traces.

In the distant past I remember there were some Linux LiveCDs that automatically enabled SWAP partitions and that could lead to information leakage, but now that you've shut the system down already, there's no way of knowing what your Live distribution might have touched.