Little Snitch Bundle 2014
I've had Little Snitch installed on my machine for a long time, so I have a pretty good idea of what connections to the network are normally occurring on the computer. All connection attempts also go through Sophos AntiVirus's Web Intelligence feature, so I get kind of a heads-up through that as well (if you're not familiar with it, it 'blocks access to malicious websites using realtime reputation checks' and 'blocks malicious downloads from websites, protecting your Mac from obfuscated, polymorphic and zero-day threats').
I know many people don't like Sophos, but I've never had any problems with it, and my point is that these connections are new. I never used to see these.
Anyway, I've recently had some weird behavior on my computer that has started to make me suspicious, and within this timeframe, I've started to get random connection requests to that specific IP and port (192.168.1.85:8080). What is especially strange is that these connection requests occur regardless of what my local IP currently is.
For example, my current local IP is 192.168.0.30 (in other words, on a subnet (?) different from that of the mystery IP - 192.168.0 vs 192.168.1), but I've also experienced this on networks where the local IP pool is 10.0.0.x. These are all really small, personal Wi-Fi networks, so there's no local network activity that should account for this.
I've looked online for anything related to this phenomenon, and I can't really find anything. A search of my console shows that it only has entries for this IP for the fact that Sophos Web Intelligence wasn't able to check out that connection (as I denied it in Little Snitch). In the past, I have tried allowing the connection, and nothing seems to happen. No functionality appears to kick in, so I can't figure out why it's even trying to connect. Trying to load that IP and port in a browser does nothing.
When I searched the Little Snitch Connection Monitor for 192.168.1.85, the process AddressBookSourceSync comes up as the one and only result (not even SophosWebIntelligence.bundle does), but inspecting the process's activity shows connection attempts to a bunch of hostnames related to Google (expected), a bunch of IP addresses that are not the one I'm looking for (so why is it showing up as the lone search result?), and connection stats that say that, of its 5 attempts, none have been blocked (also odd, given that I blocked it). There's nothing else listed in the Info panel, so I don't even know why it's coming up. Checking the info panel for SophosWebIntelligence.bundle just lists '8 servers' connected to without any detailed info. I just tried searching for '192.168.happypants' in the Connection Monitor search field, and AddressBookSourceSync is still the lone result, so…Little Snitch bug?
So why would my computer be trying to connect to this local IP on the alternate http port? I know from my research that various bits of software use that IP for a local server, but I don't have any of those bits of software installed. My mind is veering toward something malicious, but I'd be very happy to rule it out with something definitively known and benign.
Any thoughts?
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Little Snitch Bundle 2014 Online
Little Snitch is a mixed bag. On the one hand, there has been malware that short-circuited its own install process if Little Snitch was present. Thus, just having Little Snitch installed prevented installation, because the hackers behind the malware knew that Little Snitch would prevent it from working properly. Mar 30, 2018 Our new desktop experience was built to be your music destination. Listen to official albums & more.
Little Snitch Crack
- Oct 22, 2014 It is easy, Little Snitch report that coreaudiod want to connect to 192.168.1.2. 192.168.1.2 is the IP off inern router witch it got from the extern router. Little Snitch actually see it. I got two routers, witch to different IP span, for reason who is not important here.
- Mar 14, 2014 I have Little Snitch monitor for new connection requests. For the first time, something called 'noticeboard' is trying to connect to swscan.apple.com. I assume (hope) this is legit since swscan.apple.com is used for upgrades. But I've never seen it before. I've searched high and low and cannot find what 'noticeboard' is.
- Sep 08, 2017 The Internet is a terrifying place, and Objective Development’s Little Snitch 4 ($45) has tried for many years to help keep your Mac locked down by monitoring connections and letting you control inbound and outbound traffic. Version 4 refines and extends this friendly firewall, and if you’ve used it or looked at it in the past.