EDITED this with explanation.
I was wondering if there is a reason why ntray and nrecord is sending and receiving data from imrk.net?
I am wondering if this is normal behavior or is my machine compromised?
I haven't caught my other NPVR machine sending and receiving data to imrk.net
Thanks,
EDIT:
Never mind. I use a host file to prevent known Trojan sites, etc, from getting out of my network.
Color me dumb. Imrk.net was the first item in my host file meant to keep known hack sites/trojans from breaking free but for whatever reason it was set to 127.0.0.1 which is the localhost and, although I am not sure if this is the exact reason, but imrk.net was first on the list as 127.0.0.1 making ipv4 loopback the imrk.net local domain. So, it is all good now and both are back to "Ipv4 loopback".
It's enough to scare a person that his server was compromised. Still running a lot of malware checks though. The computer is custom built, with all new equipment and no thrills as far as software goes.
I was wondering if there is a reason why ntray and nrecord is sending and receiving data from imrk.net?
I am wondering if this is normal behavior or is my machine compromised?
I haven't caught my other NPVR machine sending and receiving data to imrk.net
Thanks,
EDIT:
Never mind. I use a host file to prevent known Trojan sites, etc, from getting out of my network.
Color me dumb. Imrk.net was the first item in my host file meant to keep known hack sites/trojans from breaking free but for whatever reason it was set to 127.0.0.1 which is the localhost and, although I am not sure if this is the exact reason, but imrk.net was first on the list as 127.0.0.1 making ipv4 loopback the imrk.net local domain. So, it is all good now and both are back to "Ipv4 loopback".
It's enough to scare a person that his server was compromised. Still running a lot of malware checks though. The computer is custom built, with all new equipment and no thrills as far as software goes.
~Paul
If you haven't broken it at least once, you're not doing it right. :eek:
If you haven't broken it at least once, you're not doing it right. :eek: