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Apr 24 2008, 06:26 PM
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#1
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Authentic Member ![]() ![]() Group: Authentic Member Posts: 23 Joined: 17-January 08 Member No.: 76,039 Operating System: Windows XP |
When I first power on my PC, everything's fine. After 10 minutes, my browser stops working. It says it's connecting to a site, and then it times out. Firefox and IE both do the same thing. The only solution is to reboot, and that gives me 10 more minutes. Just logging off doesn't help. It has to be a restart. Only the browser is affected. Client/server apps continue to work okay, and I can ping external sites from the command prompt. When I run Windows network diagnostics, it says it succeeded in making a passive FTP connection, but it is not able to make an HTTP or HTTPS connection. This has been going on for about two weeks now, and I thought it might be related to a warning message that I got from Comodo Defense+. I posted the problem over in the malware section, but they said my system is clean, and sent me here. I'm running Windows XP Pro SP2, Firefox 2.0.0.12 and IE 7.0.5730.11. Any suggestions? Thanks, Milo |
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Apr 24 2008, 07:03 PM
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#2
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Authentic Member ![]() ![]() Group: Authentic Member Posts: 222 Joined: 17-March 08 From: Millenium Falcon Member No.: 77,666 Operating System: windows xp sp2 |
QUOTE McAfee is useless and a major resource hog. I recommend that you remove it and instead use a program like AVG/Avast/AntiVir http://forums.whatthetech.com/index.php?s=...st&p=436979 |
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Apr 24 2008, 08:56 PM
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#3
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Authentic Member ![]() ![]() Group: Authentic Member Posts: 23 Joined: 17-January 08 Member No.: 76,039 Operating System: Windows XP |
QUOTE McAfee is useless and a major resource hog. I recommend that you remove it and instead use a program like AVG/Avast/AntiVir I already know that. But that wasn't the question. |
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May 3 2008, 07:29 AM
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#4
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Authentic Member ![]() ![]() Group: Authentic Member Posts: 23 Joined: 17-January 08 Member No.: 76,039 Operating System: Windows XP |
I'm still looking for help with this problem. I made some progress with this article from Microsoft: http://support.microsoft.com/kb/926431
When I boot in safe mode with networking, the problem goes away. I've gotten all the way through "Advanced troubleshooting method six", so I've ruled out services and startup programs. Now Microsoft is suggesting system restore, which will probably fix things, but won't tell me what the problem was. I'm pretty sure I picked this up at a malicious web site, but none of the malware scanners can find it. It would be nice to track down the driver, or whatever it is, and submit it for analysis. Any suggestions on how to identify the culprit? Thanks, Milo |
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May 3 2008, 08:59 AM
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#5
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Authentic Member ![]() ![]() Group: Authentic Member Posts: 98 Joined: 20-August 06 Member No.: 60,391 Operating System: XP HE SP2 |
Is it only your browser that hangs or your whole computer?
Jeremy |
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May 3 2008, 10:03 AM
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#6
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Authentic Member ![]() ![]() Group: Authentic Member Posts: 23 Joined: 17-January 08 Member No.: 76,039 Operating System: Windows XP |
It's only the browser. Client server apps, streaming audio and video, etc., all continue to work. And the browser is okay for html files on my hard drive. But if I try to initiate a new http or https connection, it times out. Happens with both Firefox and IE.
Last night I watched an hour-long concert embedded in a web page. No problem, as long as I click the start button on the embedded player before the 10 minutes are up. Thanks, Milo This post has been edited by Milo77: May 3 2008, 10:06 AM |
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May 3 2008, 10:22 AM
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#7
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Authentic Member ![]() ![]() Group: Authentic Member Posts: 98 Joined: 20-August 06 Member No.: 60,391 Operating System: XP HE SP2 |
Who is your internet service provider? The reason I'm asking is because I know with some isp you can set settings where your connection will time out with a set time of being idle or just being on the network so long. Maybe you, or someone else set some settings without knowing.
Jeremy |
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May 3 2008, 10:33 AM
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#8
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Authentic Member ![]() ![]() Group: Authentic Member Posts: 23 Joined: 17-January 08 Member No.: 76,039 Operating System: Windows XP |
Comcast is my ISP. I have a Linksys router/firewall, and I believe all the ISP-specific settings are in the router (but I don't know that for sure.)
Also, the other computers in the house don't have the problem. Thanks, Milo |
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May 7 2008, 01:28 AM
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#9
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![]() Always Happy Group: Malware Team Posts: 3,745 Joined: 9-December 06 From: Haggistown, Kiltland Member No.: 65,226 Operating System: XP Pro Ubuntu 8.04 |
Well, we can have another look if you like.
Download Deckard's System Scanner (DSS) to your Desktop. Note: You must be logged onto an account with administrator privileges.
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May 7 2008, 12:29 PM
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#10
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![]() Always Happy Group: Malware Team Posts: 3,745 Joined: 9-December 06 From: Haggistown, Kiltland Member No.: 65,226 Operating System: XP Pro Ubuntu 8.04 |
Oops, replied to the wrong topic.
Could you post that dss log to the topic in the malware Removal room, please. |
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May 18 2008, 05:55 AM
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#11
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New Member ![]() Group: New Member Posts: 1 Joined: 18-May 08 Member No.: 79,101 Operating System: XP |
I have just had the same experience with only being able to access the internet via HTTP for ten minutes after a reboot, but not having any problem accessing the internet via HTTPS continuously. I have a brand new Sony VAIO laptop with WIn XP professional installed instead of Vista.
I tried several virus / adware scanners to no avail. I tried stopping all automatically loaded programs except the bare essentials for keeping the computer running. None of this worked. I also tried the software Winsockxpfix.exe which didn't help. Then, after reading on the internet about other people's experiences over the past two years with this kind of problem, it seems that many thought it had to do with the virus software being used or some residual left from an earlier uninstall of some antivirus software. In my case the computer came already loaded with Symantec AntiVirus (Norton Antivirus) installed and running, and other people seemed to correct their 10 minute problem by installing ZoneAlarm. I uninstalled the Symantec AntiVirus software and installed ZoneAlarm Suite, and the problem is gone! This might also have worked by reinstalling the Symantec software but I didn't try that since other people mentioned ZoneAlarm working for them. |
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Aug 1 2008, 11:57 PM
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#12
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New Member ![]() Group: New Member Posts: 1 Joined: 1-August 08 Member No.: 80,700 Operating System: Vista Ultimate |
I have a similar problem. I haven't timed it...but I think mine takes a bit longer than 10 minutes to start haning. It does affect both FireFox and IE7. It started with FF3. I uninstalled and installed FF2, but still same problem. This is on my new Vista Ultimate machine. I am using Zone Alarm (free version) & Avast (free version) and had no other firewall or virus protectioin ever installed. This is really frustrating!
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