03-29-2014
Seems the main thing you are worried about is that someone is reading your emails on your computer; but you do not mention specifically what email account you are using or how you access email.
If you are worried a relative is reading emails that are sensitive and related to that relative (like in a divorce proceeding), you should set up a separate email account that is unknown to your relative (like a new gmail or yahoo account) and use that new account to communicate with your lawyer.
If you want to be even more safe, do not use your computer at home to communicate with this new email account.
It's not possible for us to know to any degree of certainty if your home computer or your accounts have been compromised; so it is best to assume they have been compromised (since you are in a sensitive situation) and you should not do sensitive work on that computer until such time you are 100% sure your home computer is safe and secure from others.
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/* Linux Slackware */
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Body of Messages log... (1 Reply)
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LEARN ABOUT OPENSOLARIS
u370
machid(1) User Commands machid(1)
NAME
machid, sun, iAPX286, i286, i386, i486, i860, pdp11, sparc, u3b, u3b2, u3b5, u3b15, vax, u370 - get processor type truth value
SYNOPSIS
sun
iAPX286
i386
pdp11
sparc
u3b
u3b2
u3b5
u3b15
vax
u370
DESCRIPTION
The following commands will return a true value (exit code of 0) if you are using an instruction set that the command name indicates.
sun True if you are on a Sun system.
iAPX286 True if you are on a computer using an iAPX286 processor.
i386 True if you are on a computer using an iAPX386 processor.
pdp11 True if you are on a PDP-11/45tm or PDP-11/70tm.
sparc True if you are on a computer using a SPARC-family processor.
u3b True if you are on a 3B20 computer.
u3b2 True if you are on a 3B2 computer.
u3b5 True if you are on a 3B5 computer.
u3b15 True if you are on a 3B15 computer.
vax True if you are on a VAX-11/750tm or VAX-11/780tm.
u370 True if you are on an IBM(R) System/370tm computer.
The commands that do not apply will return a false (non-zero) value. These commands are often used within makefiles (see make(1S)) and
shell scripts (see sh(1)) to increase portability.
ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
| ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
|Availability |SUNWcsu |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
SEE ALSO
make(1S), sh(1), test(1), true(1), uname(1), attributes(5)
NOTES
The machid family of commands is obsolete. Use uname -p and uname -m instead.
SunOS 5.11 5 Jul 1990 machid(1)