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BSOD help needed.
#1
A friend of mine was running Malwarebytes on her Toshiba Satellite, and all of a sudden she ended up with a bluescreen. I told her to run a BSOD viewer, and she gave me this:

Code:
==================================================
Dump File         : Mini060213-01.dmp
Crash Time        : 6/2/2013 9:06:04 PM
Bug Check String  : SYSTEM_THREAD_EXCEPTION_NOT_HANDLED
Bug Check Code    : 0x1000007e
Parameter 1       : 0xc0000005
Parameter 2       : 0x9c0bde5e
Parameter 3       : 0x88967bf8
Parameter 4       : 0x889678f4
Caused By Driver  : srv.sys
Caused By Address : srv.sys+21e5e
File Description  : Server driver
Product Name      : Microsoft® Windows® Operating System
Company           : Microsoft Corporation
File Version      : 6.0.6000.16386 (vista_rtm.061101-2205)
Processor         : 32-bit
Crash Address     : srv.sys+21e5e
Stack Address 1   : ntkrnlpa.exe+20ddbb
Stack Address 2   : ntkrnlpa.exe+a5e4a
Stack Address 3   : ntkrnlpa.exe+1d6016
Computer Name     :
Full Path         : C:\Windows\Minidump\Mini060213-01.dmp
Processors Count  : 2
Major Version     : 15
Minor Version     : 6002
Dump File Size    : 142,984
Dump File Time    : 6/2/2013 9:31:45 PM
==================================================

It seems to point out a 0xc0000005 access violation on srv.sys. I did some snooping around and it could be due to outdated system sh*t, more so since my friend appears to be running on Vista RTM, but could it be due to something else?
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#2
huckleberrypie Wrote:A friend of mine was running Malwarebytes on her Toshiba Satellite, and all of a sudden she ended up with a bluescreen. I told her to run a BSOD viewer, and she gave me this:

It seems to point out a 0xc0000005 access violation on srv.sys. I did some snooping around and it could be due to outdated system sh*t, more so since my friend appears to be running on Vista RTM, but could it be due to something else?

I haven't encountered a bluescreen due to srv.sys before, but that may be because I tend to keep my systems up to date whenever possible. If you can, try to see if your friend could upgrade to Vista SP2 through Windows Update. Vista RTM is old, even for Vista.
I love foxes, especially the one in my avatar.
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#3
Forgot to tell you that she is indeed running Vista SP2, and that her OS seems regularly updated, based on a Speccy log that I gathered. Still, the BSOD seemed strange although she previously had one that was linked to a Hotspot Shield driver.
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