Limited or no connectivity

Kurt

Geek Trainee
Right so, yesterday morning I woke up and realized that I had left my laptop running so when I go to shut it down I noticed that XoftSpySE had been running and found about 183 things of spyware on my pc so I remove them and reboot my pc.

When I logged back onto my pc my Local Area Connection had a little warning sign next to it saying that I had "Limited or no connectivity" on it. So I attempt to use windows built in repair system and it does not work. I check the detials of the connection and this is what is there:

Physical Address: 00-C0-9F-AB-F1-3F
IP Address: 169.254.203.57
Subnet Mask: 255.255.0.0
Default Gateway:
DNS Server:
WINS Server:

Now I don't know much about networking but I am sure that Default Gateway, DNS Server and WINS Server should have some values right? So I pop in the windows disc and just repair my copy of windows and it still did not fix it, I have even tried various types of programs to reset the TCP/IP settings back to the defaults.

Here are my specs...
Model: Hewlett-Packard zd8000 (Laptop)
CPU: Intel(R) Pentium(R) 4 CPU 3.00GHz
Memory: 510MB RAM
OS: Windows XP Home Edition (5.1, Build 2600) Service Pack 2 (2600.xpsp_sp2_gdr.050301-1519)
NIC: Realtek RTL8139/810x Family Fast Ethernet NIC #2

I have also tried switching cables and ports around to see if it is a burnt out port and it appears it is not. Also the network is working with all my other computers as well, I am pretty sure that the spyware removed something.

Oh and my ip is assigned using DHCP, I also cannot access the router by its ip address (192.168.0.1).
Any suggestions?
 
Sounds like the spyware installed a nasty little loopback proxy, which when removed, left a hole in your network stack. In other words, "Windows is broken, reinstall". :x:
 
I've solved the issue, I manually re-configured my TCPIP stack using settings from another computer on the network... everything is alright now :)
 
I've solved the issue, I manually re-configured my TCPIP stack using settings from another computer on the network... everything is alright now :)
Wooo, you're lucky. :) I just had a friend who had his TCP-stack hijacked recently. In that case there's no elegant way to fix it. Probably this spyware only redirected you through an outside proxy, or changed your DNS settings.
 
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