OS - Win98 SE, P-III, 450 MHz, 256 MBytes Browser - Mozilla 1.2.1 (Other browsers are installed, but have not used in awhile) OE 5.0.2xxx email client NAV Spybot, Ad-aware 6.0
Howdie - Recently while running Spybot, syswvnt.dll was detected on my home system. Spybot identified it as a resident .dll potentially from Winvestigator keylogger product (line?). Spybot could not delete it as it was resident in memory at the time and possibly in use. Properties indicate it is 57,344 bytes in size. Interesting enough, Ad-aware 6.0 did not detect this particular .dll. I also ran iProcessView, msinfo32, and msconfig, but this particlular .dll did not show up in any of them. Anyway I shutdown, rebooted into DOS CLI mode and renamed syswvnt.dll to syswvnt.old. After having completed this, I rebooted my system. It came up fine; I could ran various applications seemingly without a problem. I then connected via dial-up connection to my ISP. Again, connection was no problem. I then started my email client, OE 5.00.2xxx. At this point, OE 5.0.2xxx had a problem not recognizing or connecting to various POP3 accounts I have set up in it. Keep in mind ... syswvnt.dll was not functioning at this time. I looked at a few other things related to email client and could not determine if anything else was amiss. So ... I shut my system down, renamed syswvnt.old back to syswvnt.dll and rebooted. After it had successfully rebooted, I connected to my ISP via dial-up, started my email client and then attempted to POP (download) my emails from various accounts. LO AND BEHOLD ... all is good (said with tongue in cheek here). Have any of you perhaps happen to experience this sort of thing that I have described? Anyone recognize "syswvnt.dll", the name, at all? It would appear the possibility exists that some other baseline .dll may have been replaced with syswvnt.dll (and its additional functionality ;>)). Am attempting to establish what baseline is, so I can compare to what I have. Doing this by loading Win98 SE on another clean system and taken the initial install data to compare to what I currently have on this system. My hope is that I will spot a filename (or two) that exists on the initial install that doesn't exist on the other. Thanks in advance for any comments, suggestions, questions, etc. Rob E. --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Evaluating SSL VPNs' Consider NEOTERIS, chosen as leader by top analysts! The Gartner Group just put Neoteris in the top of its Magic Quadrant, while InStat has confirmed Neoteris as the leader in marketshare. Find out why, and see how you can get plug-n-play secure remote access in about an hour, with no client, server changes, or ongoing maintenance. Visit us at: http://www.neoteris.com/promos/sf-6-9.htm ----------------------------------------------------------------------------