Does this mean, some malware program tries to connect to the internet and mimics some otherwise legitimate program name, such as bbw.exe, just to seduce the user into allowing some connection? Thus the original bbw.exe is potentially not the origin of this message? Getting interesting ...

In the meantime I sent my resident BBW.exe file to -> http://www.virustotal.com

Here is the online scan result of this service

Antivirus Result

a-squared -
AhnLab-V3 -
AntiVir -
Antiy-AVL -
Authentium -
Avast -
AVG -
BitDefender -
CAT-QuickHeal -
ClamAV -
Comodo -
DrWeb -
eSafe -
eTrust-Vet -
F-Prot -
Fortinet -
GData -
Ikarus -
Jiangmin -
K7AntiVirus -
Kaspersky -
McAfee -
McAfee+Artemis -
McAfee-GW-Edition -
Microsoft -
NOD32 -
Norman -
nProtect -
Panda -
PCTools -
Prevx -
Rising -
Sophos -
Sunbelt -
Symantec -
TheHacker -
TrendMicro -
VBA32 -
ViRobot -
VirusBuster -

Thus no clue yet ...

PS: Formatting is not exactly a strong feature of this forum -> those little dashes above should line up underneath the heading 'Result', indicating 'no infection'. Albeit it's still no guarantee, bbw.exe seems to be free from infections. Do I have some virus lurking exploiting programs such as bbw.exe on 'conncet time', or are there other options?


Martin