F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop PC starts on a local network using mysterious packets from an unidentified source. Need assistance!

PC starts on a local network using mysterious packets from an unidentified source. Need assistance!

PC starts on a local network using mysterious packets from an unidentified source. Need assistance!

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KateKitKat
Member
138
06-19-2016, 07:24 AM
#1
My PC has started up during the night because strange packets arrived from an unknown source. I tried turning off the WOL feature using a batch file I created, so it shouldn’t be happening now. Still, I’m worried about possible threats—could someone be sending pings to my system and waking it up? It doesn’t affect other devices, which are always connected. Should I be concerned about my MAC address being exposed or misused?
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KateKitKat
06-19-2016, 07:24 AM #1

My PC has started up during the night because strange packets arrived from an unknown source. I tried turning off the WOL feature using a batch file I created, so it shouldn’t be happening now. Still, I’m worried about possible threats—could someone be sending pings to my system and waking it up? It doesn’t affect other devices, which are always connected. Should I be concerned about my MAC address being exposed or misused?

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MCFrags_YT
Junior Member
15
06-19-2016, 04:16 PM
#2
The matrix has you in its focus.
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MCFrags_YT
06-19-2016, 04:16 PM #2

The matrix has you in its focus.

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Der_Zwieback
Member
148
06-23-2016, 08:22 PM
#3
You can tell it's being Woken on Lan by checking for specific in-game events, character interactions, or updates that align with the game's themes and storylines.
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Der_Zwieback
06-23-2016, 08:22 PM #3

You can tell it's being Woken on Lan by checking for specific in-game events, character interactions, or updates that align with the game's themes and storylines.

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BanannaKing202
Junior Member
42
06-24-2016, 04:47 AM
#4
Look for any unfamiliar entries in the Startup programs section of Task Manager. Verify your BIOS settings to ensure it can enter a proper deep sleep mode.
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BanannaKing202
06-24-2016, 04:47 AM #4

Look for any unfamiliar entries in the Startup programs section of Task Manager. Verify your BIOS settings to ensure it can enter a proper deep sleep mode.

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Steam31
Member
73
06-24-2016, 05:21 AM
#5
The Event Viewer displays relevant information about system events and errors.
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Steam31
06-24-2016, 05:21 AM #5

The Event Viewer displays relevant information about system events and errors.

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Itz_Slurp
Junior Member
45
06-24-2016, 07:42 PM
#6
Thanks for your input! It seems the event viewer isn't actively running in Task Manager, and it only displays generic messages like "wake source: unknown." That suggests the issue might be local rather than a network problem. I understand you're relieved—no major security concerns here. Just a minor inconvenience over nothing.
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Itz_Slurp
06-24-2016, 07:42 PM #6

Thanks for your input! It seems the event viewer isn't actively running in Task Manager, and it only displays generic messages like "wake source: unknown." That suggests the issue might be local rather than a network problem. I understand you're relieved—no major security concerns here. Just a minor inconvenience over nothing.