English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

6 answers

It depends. If your PC is in a Local Area Network (e.g. a small Office or student dorm) then this traffic is completely normal, and shouldn't be blocked.

If it's from the Internet, then you don't have your router configured properly.

Ports 135 and 445 are used by Windows for sharing files and printers and finding each other in a Local Area Network. So generally this is a Good Thing (tm) and if you block these, you will give others and the Admin of your LAN a headache.

However if you get these requests really from the Internet, then you should make sure your PC is up to date on http://update.microsoft.com as these are the ports through wich the old Blaster Worms infect unpatched PCs. However, normally thee shouldn't enter from outside the Internet into your Network. Configure your Router to block incoming Connections on these ports.

2007-02-20 02:26:02 · answer #1 · answered by Arminator 7 · 0 0

I can only speak for what is generally accepted in the US. Technically stations can play and entire CD, but are strongly encouraged not to; unless in a joint promotion arranged in advance with notice to all: label, artist, management, and local retailers. Radio station program directors, however, have been known to bend the rules and don't like being told what to do by others. So it's occasionally done, more often on non-commercial stations. The reason of course is because those who produced the CD want to you buy that CD, but if you can record it, in its entirety, off the radio with digital quality, you are less likely to purchase it. Another reason it's not often done, especially by bigger commercial stations in bigger markets, is because it's not considered particularly good programming - and leaves less room for the commercials. It better be a band that a lot of your listeners will sit thru for an entire CD. A lot of people listen for consistent variety. That's why something of this nature should be considered a novelty and done in moderation. -a guy named duh

2016-05-23 22:28:45 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I doubt that it will ever stop. The only way to stop it its to disconnect yourself from the net, but that's pointless. Your firewall is doing its job, so you should be good. Does my just be port scans and you'll always get those on your pc when connected to the web. Its unavoidable.

2007-02-20 02:15:53 · answer #3 · answered by Elgato 3 · 0 0

Someone on your network (maybe through your ISP) is either trying to hack you, or has a virus. It might never stop, but your firewall should protect you.

2007-02-20 02:00:48 · answer #4 · answered by Pfo 7 · 0 0

hi,

this both port is use for sharing resorces in shared network. so every computer in network communicate via this port. also some spyware, trojans or micilinious code maybe installed in your computer so that everytime they attach on that port.

First you need to scan your computer with any good anti-spyware and you need to update your computer with Microsoft update service for regular patches. also dont forgot antivirus & firewall.

regards,
paresh

2007-02-23 05:06:10 · answer #5 · answered by Net Oracle 4 · 0 0

i cant understand which sense u had said. tell about brief.

2007-02-20 01:46:11 · answer #6 · answered by ramesh 2 · 0 1

fedest.com, questions and answers