Thank you Eric and Eric
Eric - Palustris. I had read over that article prior to posting the topic.
Thanks for posting. There were as many questions as answers
Heres another link:-
http://www.hanselman.com/blog/CSIMyComputerWhatIsNetsessionwinexeFromAkamaiAndHowDidItGetOnMySystem.aspxAs in the link Palustris posted, scroll down and theres an abundance of For and Against comments and no surprise, there are very few FOR!
This bit is interesting 17/11/11 by :_
think this is the renamed Red Swoosh client. I used to work for that company -- it's a P2P data delivery system that helps speed up downloads by pulling some bits from other people who've already downloaded the file from its origin. Akamai bought Red Swoosh a few years back, and I think this is the renamed client software.
He could be correct! You'll see Red Swoosh mentioned in that screenshot I posted to initiate this topic.
and this (if you've got a few hours to spare!):
Here's another tool to view who netsession is talking to via IP.
If you go to Start -> Run -> type "resmon" (without quotations) you will bring up the Resource Monitor.
In the Resource Monitor, the first tab is called Overview.
The Overview page is divided in to two halves. The right side is a graphical viewer of running process, applications, net I/O, etc of your CPU, Disk, Network and Memory. The left side is a breakdown of what the processes are processing.
So the trick is to make sure all four fields are expanded fully via the "open/close" arrow on each header. The header you are concerned about is the Network header to view the I/O. In this field, you can select by 'Image' to view the processes in alphabetical order. Scroll down until you see netsession_win.exe. This will tell you exactly which IP netsession is communicating with. From there you can just use any free IP locator and input the address to see who owns it.
A very useful tool (resmon that is!!!!)
So far, I believe its safe, but using your bandwidth to help others doing downloads.
It can be installed by any one of quite a number of respectable software suppliers.
I suspect the software is more useful to them that to you or me
Its is safe to stop the service (Ive experienced no problems today).
Awaiting comments and advice from another IT colleague re uninstalling.
Footie begins on TV- end of torture for today.
PS: I'd like to hear from others who find this on their computers. I think it is quite common for anyone with Adobe products installed
Don't panic if you have it. Lets see what else we can learn about this.
To be continued...
PS again!
I'd like to assure our members that our
Bank Genie and
Ideas Genie software does not carry this Akamai present