Originally Posted by
ollllllo
your suggestion did not work
HELP!
??????????????
I have no idea who this person is or who he is responding to...ignore.
One thing that jumps out immediately is you have a HUGE number of running processes and a huge number or items auto starting, either programs or services.
Here is the definition of a buffer overflow:
A buffer overflow occurs when a program or process tries to store more data in a buffer (temporary data storage area) than it was intended to hold. Since buffers are created to contain a finite amount of data, the extra information - which has to go somewhere - can overflow into adjacent buffers, corrupting or overwriting the valid data held in them
This CAN be do to a security problem.
Turn OFF Windows Defender. And turn OFF that emule P2P program and leave it off.
See if you can do this:
Please Download
ATF-Cleaner.exe by Atribune(Windows XP, 2K, 2003 & Vista ONLY)
• You can put ATF-Cleaner on your Desktop for easy access.
RUN ATF-Cleaner.exe.
-- Click on ATF-Cleaner to run it
-- Where it says Select Files To Delete, Check the Select All Option
-- Click Empty Selected > OK
Please download
Malwarebytes' Anti-Malware (MBA-M) to your Desktop.
* DoubleClick
mbam-setup.exe and follow the prompts to install MBA-M.
* Be sure a checkmark is placed next to Update Malwarebytes' Anti-Malware and Launch Malwarebytes' Anti-Malware, then click Finish.
* If an update is found, it will download and install the latest version.
* Once the program has loaded, select
Perform full scan, then click Scan.
* When the scan is complete, click OK, then Show Results to view the results.
* Be sure that everything is checked, and click Remove Selected.
* When MBA-M finishes, Notepad will open with the log. Please save it where you can find it easily. The log can also be opened by going to Start > All Programs > Malwarebytes' Anti-Malware > Logs > log-date.txt.
Reboot the Computer
Run a new scan with HJT and save the log. Post back here with the MBA-M log and the HJT log.