I apologize in advance if this is a stupid question.
Twice in the past week as I have shut down my computer, the computer has told me that other users were connected to my computer and that by shutting down I would disconnect them.
I have never seen this message before. I have had the same DSL for about 4 years.
Who are these other users? What do they want? Who told them they could just waltz right in?
Could also be spyware or a backdoor trojan. To be on the safe side, run Adaware or Spybot and then do a thorough virus scan. If your computer is not connected to the internet through a router (like a single-user home system), install a firewall, like the free ZoneAlarm.
On top of what Q.E.D. suggests I would download a program called Anti-Trojan 5.5 www.anti-trojan.net It is a great program for getting rid of Trojan horse virus. I have Ad-Aware and I don’t believe it identifies trojan horse.
A lot of the stuff that triggers Zonealarm is harmless net background noise, not necessarily hack attempts. You may still have a malicious software installed on your system, or shared folders. Zonealarm will prevent access to these, but it isn’t really fixing the problem.
Could it also be that you are running XP and that you have two users logged in at the same time? I know I get this message if my wife and I are both “logged in” and I try to reboot or shut down.
Another thing, if you do have File and Print Sharing enabled, you can still get that message even if you have no shared folders. Your computer might have been elected to a Windows Browse Master position. It’s not very prestigious, but it does cause other people’s computers to try and talk with yours.
In a peer to peer network of Windows machines, one gets elected to the Browse Master position. This is the machine that maintains the network information that appears when you double click on your Network Neighborhood. If your machine gets picked to be the Browse Master, when you shut it down you will often get your “Users are connected blah blah blah” message. It’s because other machines have connected to it looking for network information.
There is a lot more to this process, but that’s it in a nutshell.
**Sorry, you DO have to have a shared folder to be the Browse Master.
I once read about a type of computer that is online for anyone to share programs and files with. Is this true? Or am I not able to go this website and share it?