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Translation:
In actuality your norton software is updating or something along those lines.
Translation:
In actuality your norton software is updating or something along those lines.
From what I read and understand is if I see something other than 127.0.0.1 or 0.0.0.0 when I run netstat or netstat -ano then it is someone else connected especially when it says "ESTABLISHED"
True?[hr]
Norton isn't running when I see these.
From what I read and understand is if I see something other than 127.0.0.1 or 0.0.0.0 when I run netstat or netstat -ano then it is someone else connected especially when it says "ESTABLISHED"
True?
-a Displays all connections and listening ports.
-n Displays addresses and port numbers in numerical form.
-o Displays the owning process ID associated with each connection.
I'm saying thats it's insane.
No one has hacked you. Unless it's an extraneous issue to this situation. You have a service connected to symantec's service. Its using SSL.
Your pc 192.168.1.71 is connected to Symantecs server. LAN = Local Area Network. You can't whois your local address (192.168.1.71). Whois is for domains and remote host/server IP addresses not your local network addresses.
If there is a ridiculous amount of activity scrolling up the screen and your system is a sluggish, you may have a Trojan, virus or worm.
An "extraneous issue" means something outside what you have told us.
They say clearly:If there is a ridiculous amount of activity scrolling up the screen and your system is a sluggish, you may have a Trojan, virus or worm.
That is in no way a definite. You may have. That warrants checking into the source of the connection and where its going. Thats been done. Your the one end and symantec is the other. Unless symantec has been hacked just for the purpose of a revenge attack on you i'd say your safe on this occasion.