
A keylogger is a very specific thing though, and if the Mac has constantly remained under your sole control and in your physical possession there is little reason to suspect one may have been installed.Īlthough software with the ability to log keystrokes as well as generally observe user input (including the ability to periodically take pictures using a Mac's FaceTime camera and listening with its microphone) can certainly be used with malicious intent, the products themselves have legitimate purposes. After that, manually bring back your personal data and install only legally obtained third party software. Then boot into Recovery Mode, erase the drive and reinstall the OS. Backup your personal data such as photos, email, etc. I personally wouldn't waste the time trying to fix this Mac. You may not have installed any known illegal software items, but torrents simply shouldn't be trusted for any software.
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That illegal cracked copy of Photoshop? Very likely to also install malware you don't know is built into the hacked installer.

Torrents are the number one way to get not just adware and assorted malware installed without your knowledge, it's also where the worst of it comes from. Given that you also run a torrent, I'd suspect you've downloaded and installed numerous illegal software packages. That includes MacKeeper, CleanMyMac, or anything that even smells similar.

Every single app that claims to clean or speed up your Mac do more damage than good. ITunesHelper, uTorrent, Google Drive, Messages, MacReviver Jenahs-MacBook-Pro:~ jenahsmith$ osascript -e 'tell application "System Events" to get name of every login item' 2> /dev/null Last login: Fri Jan 13 20:21:52 on console

I found a recent question where someone showed step by step instructions to find the key logger, I followed through and got this.
