> I've been posting for a few days and can't get a response
> from whomever is fielding questions. Can someone please
> post a reply, following the thread of questions I had from
> about 1 week ago (see below)? Thank you very much, in
> advance!
> Cindy
>
>
> Mikolaj,
> Thank you for the 2nd suggestion re. my problems with the
> updater failing and indicating "could not connect to the
> internet". Unfortunately, that didn't work either. I
> checked the norton firewall settings and it is set
> to "permit all" for the "GiantAntispywareupdater.exe". Any
> other suggestions besides the firewall settings and making
> sure IE is not set to run offline? Thanks very much for
> your help and any other suggestions you might have!!
> Regards,
> Cindy
>
> Subject: Re: Update function still not working, STILL
> need assistance
Hi again,
I am sorry for the lack of response from me, but Bill Sanderson excused me a
little bit - I am trying to help as volunteer and for free and not only
here, on this newsgroup. And really couldn't find enough time to manage all
that I wanted.. A day seems to have to few hours for me.. ;-)
As I see, the further assistance of Bill Sanderson helped finding the source
of the problem, i.e. Norton Firewall (so my suggestion about it was right).
What else can I say about this, is that for example the firewall I use, free
version of Zone Alarm, allows three MSAS processes to get the access to the
internet. These processes are:
gcasSWupdater.exe
GIANTAntiSpywareMain.exe
GIANTAntiSpywwareUpdater.exe
( I suppose the first one is responsible for the application to update
itself, third one for definitions update, and the main app for sending the
suspected spyware reports and maybe some other tasks - if I'm wrong then
I'll be glad to be corrected by anyone).
If you want to give Norton one more try - just check if you can give the
internet access for these three processes in the firewall rules. This may
allow you to use MSAS without switching between Norton and Windows
firewalls.
Concerning the possible trojans you and Bill Sanderson mentioned, I suggest
you would scan your computer in the safe mode using MSAS, antivirus (both
with up to date signatures, i.e. definition files) and some additional, but
helpful, applications.
So start the computer in the Safe mode (F8 during boot-up), run Windows
Explorer, go to your profile temporary folders (usually C:\Documents and
Settings\username\local settings\temp and c:\Documents and
Settings\username\local settings\Temporary Internet Files\Content.IE5) and
delete all the files in those directories and subdirectories. Then do a full
system scan with MS AntiSpyware (check the proper option under Scan
settings). Scan the computer with your Norton antivirus software. And also
with some other "cleaning" software such as:
Spybot Search&Destroy
http://www.spybot.info/en/index.html
HijackThis
http://www.tomcoyote.org/hjt/
CWShredder
http://www.majorgeeks.com/download3019.html
Ad-Aware SE Personal
http://www.lavasoft.com/software/adaware/
McAfee Stinger
http://vil.nai.com/vil/stinger/
If you run HijackThis you can check the log it prepares - just copy and
paste it to the
http://www.hijackthis.de web page and click analyze button.
Maybe this is some "overwork" and your system is clean, but it's better to
check twice and be sure.. :-)
--
Pozdrawiam serdecznie / Kind regards
Mikolaj Kaminski
MS-MVP, Poland