Greg Folkert wrote:
turns out it must be a process i have running at work connecting to squid on my machine at home.On Sat, 2003-12-20 at 13:37, Debian User wrote:group,i happened to be running tcpdup -i eth0 this a.m. just to see what is going on outside of my firewall. i noticed my firewall accessing an adserver in the aol.com domain. i cannot figure out what process is causing this to continue. i used tcpdump and netstat to the fullest of my ability but i am not abole to figure out why this adserver is being accessed from my firewall. i tcpdump-ed eth1 to see it a machine behind the firewall is responsible for this connection but there is no traffic (other than nfs and dhcp) while this is occuring. a snapshot of tcpdump -i eth0 is: 13:22:44.840202 oolmyserver.net.36324 > ads.web.aol.com.www: . ack 1 win 5840 (DF)Umm... do you use an Instant Messenger on Windows? Or Maybe a some spyware on Windows... like nCase or Gator or something similar.
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