All of a sudden, about a week ago I tried to upload some photos to Facebook, I got an error saying "Connection Reset by Peer"
- I restarded my router and computer and no dice.
- Tried using Chrome, IE8, Opera and FF3
- Uploads on my laptop and brothers computer work flawlessly
- Browser and Java are updated.
Noone of my friends has had problems with them, It's not my ISP, because my brother and laptop are able to upload fine.
The websites I've tried are Facebook, TinyPic, Imageshack, Photobucket and various Imageboards
Any suggestions?
Can you play online games or is it just http traffic that is being blocked?
Also try ftp.
[QUOTE=rieda1589;17057233]Can you play online games or is it just http traffic that is being blocked?
Also try ftp.[/QUOTE]
I can play Online fine, as well as posting on the internet (as you can see)
What kind of security do you have?
try imgkk
[QUOTE=BananasGoMoo;17057508]try imgkk[/QUOTE]
He obviously is having problems uploading on any site...
[QUOTE=ghostofme;17057592]He obviously is having problems uploading on any site...[/QUOTE]
imgkk is special.
Try uploading other content, like a video on Youtube. Then check back with us.
[QUOTE=frontman001;17060112]Try uploading other content, like a video on Youtube. Then check back with us.[/QUOTE]
Same error, "Connection Reset by Peer"
Maybe it's just with files over a certain size.
Try like a 1kb image or something.
[quote=MS Technet]Error Message:
Connection reset by peer.
Explanation:
A connection was forcibly closed by a peer. This normally results from a loss of the connection on the remote socket due to a timeout or a restart. On a datastream socket, the connection was reset. This reset could be generated locally by the network system when it detects a connection failure, or it might be received from the remote host (in TCP terms, the remote host sent an RST packet). This error is also possible on a datagram socket; for instance, this error could result if your application sends a UDP datagram to a host, which rejects it by responding with an ICMP Port Unreachable.
User Action:
Check the following: 1. Ping the remote host you were connected to. If it doesn't respond, it might be offline or there might be a network problem along the way. If it does respond, this problem might have been a transient one (so you can reconnect now), or the server application you were connected to might have terminated (so you might not be able to connect again). 2. Ping a local host to verify that your local network is still functioning (if on a serial connection, see next step). 3. Ping your local router address. If you are on a serial connection, your local router is the IP address of the host you initially logged on to using SLIP or PPP. 4. Ping a host on the same subnet as the host you were connected to (if you know of one). This will verify that the destination network is functioning. 5. [b]Type tracert at the command prompt to determine the path to the host you were connected to.[/b] This won't reveal too much unless you know the router addresses at the remote end, but it might help to identify if the problem is somewhere along the way. [/quote]
[url]http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc957018.aspx[/url]
[QUOTE=BananasGoMoo;17074211][url]http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc957018.aspx[/url][/QUOTE]
trying now, and I tried uploading a 2 pixels by 2 pixel image of black dots =/
[editline]01:15AM[/editline]
Fixed it!
Thanks guys!
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