Alina Desktop Client
Alina Desktop Client, identified as alina-desktop.exe, is the installed desktop component of the Alina platform. It provides the main user interface, opens windows, and coordinates data flow between your computer and the Alina cloud. The executable hosts UI rendering, manages local settings, and handles background tasks like updates and offline data synchronization.
The alina-desktop.exe process runs as a user‑mode client that hosts the Alina UI, communicates via IPC with a companion background service, and loads resources from the application bundle. It manages sessions, updates, and encrypted local storage for cloud access.
Alina Desktop Client is safe when obtained directly from official Alina distribution channels and installed in its designated directory. It is signed with the legitimate Alina code‑signing certificate and integrates with operating system security. If sourced from trusted channels and kept up to date, it should pose no security risk.
In its legitimate form, alina-desktop.exe is not a virus and is designed to provide the Alina UI and cloud connectivity. If you find the executable in an unexpected folder, with a mismatched hash, or under unusual names, treat it as potentially malicious and perform a full system scan. Verify signature and path before trusting it.
Red Flags: If alina-desktop.exe runs from a non-standard folder, has an unexpected signature, uses an unfamiliar hash, or prompts for elevated privileges unexpectedly, treat it as suspicious and investigate.
Reasons it's running:
It is the Alina Desktop Client that provides the local UI and cloud connectivity. You need it to access Alina features from your computer.
On Windows it usually installs to C:\Program Files\Alina\alina-desktop.exe; on macOS it resides inside the Alina.app bundle.
Disable it from Windows Task Manager startup, or remove the launch agent or startup item on macOS, then confirm it does not auto-start.
The app synchronizes data with the Alina cloud, checks for updates, and delivers notifications. You can reduce activity by turning off automatic sync in settings.
Uninstalling the desktop client removes the local UI and sync capabilities but keeps your cloud data. You can reinstall the client later if needed.
Close and restart the client, check for updates, inspect logs in AppData, and run a malware scan if you suspect compromise.