Excessive data use on my internet plan and troubleshooting question

Like many others, I've been struggling to figure out why my data consumption has jumped drastically from December to January.


I've done the following so far and have found an IP Address that seems to be consuming a lot of data.

  • Changed my Wifi passwords
  • Identified all IP addresses using my router
  • Turned off all IP addresses to see if data consumption reduced remarkably - it did indeed drop the day to day usage immediately (observed over night)
  • Turned some IP addresses back on and correlated increase in data consumption as devices were turned back on (observed over the period of several days)
  • Lodged a request to my ISP - multiple phone calls and Chat Agent interactions so far, assuring me they're investigating and will call me back but nobody has yet; confirmed in writing to me that I will not suffer a charge associated with any overage while under investigation
  • Consulted the Apple Community to see what resolved others' concerns - haven't seen anything yet that definitively resolved the issue but got ideas
  • Investigated MoCA - still on my list of possible things to try (not itching to spend any money to fix an issue I don't know root cause yet)
  • Investigated IP traffic monitoring apps and ended up downloading Wireshark - learned Wireshark over the past couple days
  • Created pcap files and used Statistics feature of Wireshark to look at all IP addresses on my network to see if any stood out as having a large amount of chatter on them
  • Used filter to watch any conversation on the network which had a specific IP address of interest and traced that conversation to my main iMac device which I'm using currently with Wireshark
  • Noticed an IP address that had the absolute highest amount of total packets of 114,690 over 4.5 minutes
  • Total data from A->B was 115 MB over 4.5 minutes (the external IP address to my computer)
  • The IP address in question is 17.248.190.140 which I used an IP WHOIS lookup web site and tracked it down to an Apple owned IP but I don't know what it does and that's where my trail ended
  • All other devices are quiet with one exception. I saw a very small amount of communication within my own network from an AppleTV device to my main computer
  • I grabbed a 2nd pcap to confirm I'm still seeing the same level of traffic coming from 17.248.190.140 and it is indeed, still happening.


I know it's not definitive but I think I could be onto something. It seems interesting to me that 115MB of data was sent to my machine in a 4.5 minute data log while I was using Wireshark trying to figure out what's happening.


Worth noting is that on 1/4/24, I turned in all my Comcast equipment for the TVs in our home and had Comcast TV turned OFF. I also added YouTube TV on 1/5/24 but we haven't spent much time on that app through any of our TVs. I went so far as to log into YouTube TV on each device, then exit the apps (but not log out) like we do all streaming apps on AppleTV devices and iPhones or iPads.


Also worth noting is that I've increased our data speed from 800 GB/s to 1000 GB/s also on 1/5/24. Data cap is 1.2TB for each month (1/1/24 through 1/31/24 I believe - Comcast measures upload/download data for any given month which is asynchronous with their billing cycle).


Does anyonoe have any ideas where I go from here and if I'm on the right trail with what I've done so far? Comcast has been completely useless, not to mention terribly frustrating. I don't know what that IP address is that I mentioned above but it's something to do with Apple. It seems to be a high amount of data being used in the background and if this is something always happening on my computer, surely that would add up fast. For example, 60 minutes in 1 hr so 60/4.5 =13.3333 pcap measurement intervals in an hour. 115 MB X 13.33333 = 1.533 GB/hr of data consumption. Multiply that by 24 hours in a full day and I get 36.8GB. My average daily consumption this month is around 50 GB/day with only a few hours of Netflix in the evenings. Prior consumption per day was about 1/2 to 1/3 what it has been this month.


Could it be this one IP address causing me all this grief and coming from an Apple IP address?


This issue began as far as I can tell, as soon as January started but BEFORE I turned in equipment to Comcast as far as I can recall but I didn't take any screenshots of data utilization before I turned in equipment.


I'm running an antivirus program, always, and periodically use VPN which comes with the SaaS subscription I signed up for a few years ago which I'm very happy with.


I'm desperate for help!



2nd pcap, Statistics, Communication... Longer period of time for this capture but it looks like 124MB in this case and 115MB in the above case. Something's happening and I don't know what it is or how to stop it. HELP! TIA!




UPDATE: Looks like that IP Address is an Apple Data Center.


iMac (2017 – 2020)

Posted on Jan 21, 2024 1:24 PM

Reply
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Posted on Jan 23, 2024 2:43 PM

Wow, that was super cool! Here's the high level insight from downloading and running EtreCheckPro.


Major Issues:


    Anything that appears on this list needs immediate attention.


    Automatic updates disabled

- Automatic updates are disabled. This computer is at risk of malware infection.


    Security updates disabled

- Security updates are disabled. This computer is at risk of malware infection.


    Heavy CPU usage - Some processes are using an unusually high amount of CPU.


    Apple security disabled - Apple security software is disabled. This computer is at risk of malware infection.


 


Minor Issues:


    These issues do not need immediate attention but they may indicate future problems or opportunities for

improvement.


    System extensions installed

- This computer has system extensions installed. System extensions can be difficult to uninstall.


    Heavy RAM usage - Apps are using a large amount of RAM.


    Apps with heavy CPU usage

- There have been numerous cases of apps with heavy CPU usage.


    Unsigned files - There are unsigned software files installed. These files could be old, incompatible, and cause problems. They should be reviewed.


    System modifications - There are a large number of system modifications running in the background.


    Runaway user process - A user process is using a large percentage of your CPU.


    Limited permissions - More information may be available with Full Disk Access.


    Sharing enabled - This computer has sharing services enabled that could be a security risk.


Hardware Information:


    iMac (Retina 5K, 27-inch, 2020)


        Status: Supported


    iMac Model: iMac20,2


    3.6 GHz 10-Core Intel Core i9 (i9-10910) CPU: 10-core

128 GB RAM - At maximum


Video Information:


    AMD Radeon Pro 5700 XT - VRAM: 16GB

iMac (built-in) 5120 x 2880


 (I'm omitting Drives section where my disk and partitions are explained in detail and my Security details. If this is useful information, please let me know which part is useful. I'm trying to be conservative about what info is made available for the world to see.)


System Launch Daemons:


    [Not Loaded] 39 Apple tasks

    [Loaded] 186 Apple tasks

    [Running] 170 Apple tasks

    [Other] 4 Apple tasks

 


System Launch Agents:

    [Not Loaded] 20 Apple tasks

    [Loaded] 212 Apple tasks

    [Running] 189 Apple tasks


(I'm omitting Launch Daemons, Launch Agents, User Launch Agents, User Login Items which we can go back to if needed.)


Applications:


    637 apps

    73 x86-only apps

    5 unsigned apps


Performance:


    System Load: 5.54 (1 min ago)

5.95 (5 min ago) 5.34 (15 min ago)


    Nominal I/O usage: 4.76 MB/s

    File system: 24.34 seconds

    Write speed: 2698 MB/s

    Read speed: 2542 MB/s


CPU Usage Snapshot:


    Type Overall


    System: 3 %

    User: 12 %

    Idle: 84 %


Top Processes Snapshot by CPU:


    Process (count) CPU (Source - Location)

    remindd 110.02 % (Apple)

    suggestd 49.08 % (Apple)

    coreduetd 31.02 % (Apple)

    WindowServer 15.72 % (Apple)

    EtreCheckPro 15.26 % (Etresoft, Inc.)


Top Processes Snapshot by Memory:


    Process (count) RAM usage (Source - Location)


    BDLDaemon 2.89 GB (Bitdefender SRL)

    EtreCheckPro 1.22 GB (Etresoft, Inc.

    MTLCompilerService (5) 895 MB (Apple)

    plugin-container (9) 574 MB (Mozilla Corporation)

    mds_stores 525 MB (Apple)


Top Processes Snapshot by Network Use:


    Process Input / Output (Source - Location)

    corespeechd 3 KB / 15 MB (Apple)

    exchangesyncd 343 KB / 565 KB (Apple)

    apsd 125 KB / 525 KB (Apple)

    mDNSResponder 117 KB / 100 KB (Apple)

    firefox 107 KB / 104 KB (Mozilla Corporation)


Top Processes Snapshot by Energy Use:


    Process (count) Energy(0-100) (Source - Location)

    remindd 45 (Apple)

    suggestd 21 (Apple)

    coreduetd 17 (Apple)

    corespotlightd 4 (Apple)

    biomed 4 (Apple)


Virtual Memory Information:


    Physical RAM: 128 GB

    Free RAM: 99.93 GB

    Used RAM: 16.25 GB

    Cached files: 11.81 GB

    Available RAM: 111.75 GB

    Swap Used: 0 B


Please let me know if any of what I've shared gives any clues. There's more info in the report than what I've included above but I'm really nervous about publishing in a general forum like this for all to see. I saved a copy onto my computer in a Word doc so I have the full report handy to go back to.


Thank you very much for your help! I'm reaching the end of my troubleshooting skills for problems like this at this point but I certainly don't mind putting in the time to learn and figure out what's happening.

Similar questions

23 replies
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Jan 23, 2024 2:43 PM in response to Old Toad

Wow, that was super cool! Here's the high level insight from downloading and running EtreCheckPro.


Major Issues:


    Anything that appears on this list needs immediate attention.


    Automatic updates disabled

- Automatic updates are disabled. This computer is at risk of malware infection.


    Security updates disabled

- Security updates are disabled. This computer is at risk of malware infection.


    Heavy CPU usage - Some processes are using an unusually high amount of CPU.


    Apple security disabled - Apple security software is disabled. This computer is at risk of malware infection.


 


Minor Issues:


    These issues do not need immediate attention but they may indicate future problems or opportunities for

improvement.


    System extensions installed

- This computer has system extensions installed. System extensions can be difficult to uninstall.


    Heavy RAM usage - Apps are using a large amount of RAM.


    Apps with heavy CPU usage

- There have been numerous cases of apps with heavy CPU usage.


    Unsigned files - There are unsigned software files installed. These files could be old, incompatible, and cause problems. They should be reviewed.


    System modifications - There are a large number of system modifications running in the background.


    Runaway user process - A user process is using a large percentage of your CPU.


    Limited permissions - More information may be available with Full Disk Access.


    Sharing enabled - This computer has sharing services enabled that could be a security risk.


Hardware Information:


    iMac (Retina 5K, 27-inch, 2020)


        Status: Supported


    iMac Model: iMac20,2


    3.6 GHz 10-Core Intel Core i9 (i9-10910) CPU: 10-core

128 GB RAM - At maximum


Video Information:


    AMD Radeon Pro 5700 XT - VRAM: 16GB

iMac (built-in) 5120 x 2880


 (I'm omitting Drives section where my disk and partitions are explained in detail and my Security details. If this is useful information, please let me know which part is useful. I'm trying to be conservative about what info is made available for the world to see.)


System Launch Daemons:


    [Not Loaded] 39 Apple tasks

    [Loaded] 186 Apple tasks

    [Running] 170 Apple tasks

    [Other] 4 Apple tasks

 


System Launch Agents:

    [Not Loaded] 20 Apple tasks

    [Loaded] 212 Apple tasks

    [Running] 189 Apple tasks


(I'm omitting Launch Daemons, Launch Agents, User Launch Agents, User Login Items which we can go back to if needed.)


Applications:


    637 apps

    73 x86-only apps

    5 unsigned apps


Performance:


    System Load: 5.54 (1 min ago)

5.95 (5 min ago) 5.34 (15 min ago)


    Nominal I/O usage: 4.76 MB/s

    File system: 24.34 seconds

    Write speed: 2698 MB/s

    Read speed: 2542 MB/s


CPU Usage Snapshot:


    Type Overall


    System: 3 %

    User: 12 %

    Idle: 84 %


Top Processes Snapshot by CPU:


    Process (count) CPU (Source - Location)

    remindd 110.02 % (Apple)

    suggestd 49.08 % (Apple)

    coreduetd 31.02 % (Apple)

    WindowServer 15.72 % (Apple)

    EtreCheckPro 15.26 % (Etresoft, Inc.)


Top Processes Snapshot by Memory:


    Process (count) RAM usage (Source - Location)


    BDLDaemon 2.89 GB (Bitdefender SRL)

    EtreCheckPro 1.22 GB (Etresoft, Inc.

    MTLCompilerService (5) 895 MB (Apple)

    plugin-container (9) 574 MB (Mozilla Corporation)

    mds_stores 525 MB (Apple)


Top Processes Snapshot by Network Use:


    Process Input / Output (Source - Location)

    corespeechd 3 KB / 15 MB (Apple)

    exchangesyncd 343 KB / 565 KB (Apple)

    apsd 125 KB / 525 KB (Apple)

    mDNSResponder 117 KB / 100 KB (Apple)

    firefox 107 KB / 104 KB (Mozilla Corporation)


Top Processes Snapshot by Energy Use:


    Process (count) Energy(0-100) (Source - Location)

    remindd 45 (Apple)

    suggestd 21 (Apple)

    coreduetd 17 (Apple)

    corespotlightd 4 (Apple)

    biomed 4 (Apple)


Virtual Memory Information:


    Physical RAM: 128 GB

    Free RAM: 99.93 GB

    Used RAM: 16.25 GB

    Cached files: 11.81 GB

    Available RAM: 111.75 GB

    Swap Used: 0 B


Please let me know if any of what I've shared gives any clues. There's more info in the report than what I've included above but I'm really nervous about publishing in a general forum like this for all to see. I saved a copy onto my computer in a Word doc so I have the full report handy to go back to.


Thank you very much for your help! I'm reaching the end of my troubleshooting skills for problems like this at this point but I certainly don't mind putting in the time to learn and figure out what's happening.

Jan 23, 2024 12:59 PM in response to Nyobie

Run Etrecheck Pro on your Mac and post the report as described below. It can tell you what apps are using the most network use:


Top Processes Snapshot by Network Use:

    Process Input / Output (Source - Location)

    mDNSResponder 507 KB / 225 KB (Apple)

    com.apple.WebKit.Networking 492 KB / 37 KB (Apple)

    trustd 393 KB / 44 KB (Apple)

    Mail 116 KB / 11 KB (Apple)

    apsd 8 KB / 72 KB (Apple)


Download and run Etrecheck. Be sure to give it Full Disk access before running.



Copy and paste the results into your reply. Etrecheck is a diagnostic tool that was developed by one of the most respected users here in the ASC and recommended by Apple Support  to provide a snapshot of the system and help identify the more obvious culprits that can adversely affect a Mac's performance.


Copy the report


and use the Additional Text button to paste the report in your reply.



Then we can evaluate the report to see if we can determine the cause of the problem.


Jan 24, 2024 8:04 AM in response to Old Toad

Before I ran etrecheck this morning, I also did the following:

  1. I disabled iCloud Apps using iCloud: Photos, iCloud Drive, iCloud Mail but left iCloud Passwords & Keychain ON. I'm now observing ZERO nsurlsessiond byte exchanges between my computer and the Apple Data Center, as expected. Yesterday, I had not changed these settings. I'm including yesterday's report from etrecheck.
  2. I've disabled a few items that were being allowed to run in the background. (Adobe Creative Cloud, Dropbox, HP Diagnose & Fix, iWifi, Microsoft OneDrive, Zoom).
  3. I removed one item from Open at Login: AirPort Utility.
  4. I've re-enabled settings which addressed the Major findings from this report for things like SW/security updates.
  5. I updated my iMac iOS to the latest macOS Sonoma 14.3.
  6. I updated MS Outlook this morning.


Everything should be the latest app updates as of the time I re-ran etrecheck this morning. Hope this is helpful info to have. Thanks again!


Jan 24, 2024 9:37 AM in response to steve626

Hi steve626,


While in activity monitor and while reviewing the article in the link which you've provided, I noticed remindd showed up in my activity monitor as taking greater than 100% CPU (something like 125%) so I killed it and it hasn't come back after about 10 minutes so far. I'd found a few Apple Community posts from others dating 2 years ago, where experts advised killing the process so that's what I did. I noticed CPU Load dropped significantly. My line is showing very low use which is what I'd expect given that I only have a couple text-only web pages open and no video streaming. I've got Weatherbug app running but User % is still teetering around 1%.


I finished a video call a few minutes ago through MS Teams. I was on the call for less than an hour and my total data usage on the internet was around 2GB which also included everything else I've done on the computer for 2.5 hours. That's around what I'd expect for a normally functioning computer. I think something was going on with my iCloud account and possibly related to the enormous Photo gallery I have. I've got approximately 42K photos and just under 2K videos. I might just have to consolidate everything on my Mac, wipe everything out in the cloud, then re-load the cloud during next month's internet data cycle and monitor internet traffic afterwards to see if the problem re-appears.


For now, I'm going to keep iCloud turned OFF on this computer since it seems I may be onto something...


Jan 25, 2024 4:57 AM in response to Old Toad

Hi Old Toad,


I've been online this morning for a couple hours and cleaning up my Mac. I've uninstalled a few more apps using the uninstall programs in some cases, or deleting the app from the App folder in other cases.


I've also done a little more digging into a non responsive process having to do with Family. There were 2 processes. One was red and the other was black. The red one, I was able to trace the folder structure to a non-existent structure that may have always existed since I migrated data to this machine. Not sure. In any case, I've removed a bunch of erroneous folders which had duplicate data in them from earlier iCloud Doc sync attempts that I didn't know were there. Since I did all my clean-up, it seems much of the problem I was having, if not all, are gone (knock on wood).


CPU percentage for me at the moment is around 0.5% to 2% as my machine is doing its thing.


I decided to pay for the etrecheck app and run the report a couple more times. I've done further clean-up and looks like I'm to the point where if I muck with anything else, I could end up doing something unintentional and creating problems.


I'll bolo for any further crashes and will note what I was doing. Will also continue monitoring data utilization of my internet plan. For now, it seems like all the hints on things to look at in combination with Wireshark and etrecheck were able to address the high data streaming which I'll chalk up to either a rogue app that I've since removed or iCloud sync of my massive photo collection. Since I have everything stored in the cloud and I needed to do photo organization anyway, I'll keep iPhotos sync turned OFF for now. Everything else seems to be working just fine.


THANK YOU Old Toad, Tesserax, and steve626 for helping me out and for all that you do to help people like me. The app was very helpful along with Activity Monitor and a few links I received on things to look for. I appreciate everyone who contributed.


Final etrecheck report post-purchase, also attached.



Jan 25, 2024 3:48 PM in response to Old Toad

The original problem was fixed when I uninstalled Adobe photo processing apps and also stopped iCloud from syncing photos. Since then, I've re-enabled iCloud Drive but I've kept iCloud Photos turned off because I'm not sure if the Photos sync or if the Adobe app were misbehaving.


In any case, I'm glad the massive data consumption issue seems to be addressed with this band-aid of stopping these apps but I'd really like to get them back. I don't need either for the time being.


I didn't go so far as to contact Apple. I was going to today but after monitoring data consumption all day, I've only consumed 12GB whereas a week ago, I would have been around 40GB in a 12 hour stretch during the day. I'm very happy at the moment, to have at least stopped the massive data consumption that was happening while we weren't using our devices.


I think this thread can be closed now. Thanks!

Jan 21, 2024 2:11 PM in response to Nyobie

Nyobie wrote:

... we do all streaming apps on AppleTV devices and iPhones or iPads.

I'm running an antivirus program, always, and periodically use VPN which comes with the SaaS subscription I signed up for a few years ago which I'm very happy with.
... with only a few hours of Netflix in the evenings
UPDATE: Looks like that IP Address is an Apple Data Center.

For the Apple Data Center, are you using iCloud in any form? That might relate to the Apple IP. Disable iCloud for a week to see if it makes a difference. Do you have iPhones or iPads doing nightly backups to iCloud?


Do you have other cloud storage setups, Dropbox, Microsoft, Google, Amazon, etc.? These can cause large transfers for syncing. Do you use an online backup service?


Use of Netflix can open a wide range of possibilities, especially if multiple people are using it. For instance, if one of the users is using higher resolution video than before, that could cause this. Are you sure you know who is doing what in your residence? (Teenagers ... etc. other people might be downloading stuff and you might not know about it)


Antivirus and VPN -- these are not advised and private VPN providers are known to "harvest" data from their trusting customers. There have been lawsuits about this. Antivirus software often phones home and shares information, these should be disabled permanently and completely uninstalled, but if you insist on keeping them, turn them off for a week to see what happens.

Jan 21, 2024 3:02 PM in response to steve626

Hi and thanks for responding!


To answer your question about iCloud, yes, I am using iCloud but that's not changed for any of my devices since I've owned Apple products. I have all choices selected for backup except for my folder contents on that computer. For my MacBook Pro, I've got all documents sync'd because I don't have many docs on this device. My main computer is the iMac. I think I have maybe 50-100 documents in total, that I keep in the cloud from my MacBook Pro but I move those from the MacBook, to the cloud first, then I remove them from the cloud and put them on the iMac when I'm done with whatever it is I was doing. The size of these files is miniscule.


I've checked the settings on every app for every device connected but forgot to mention that, but what made me think it's not the streaming apps is that one night a few days ago, my house consumed 10GB of data while we were sleeping. That didn't make sense, how could there be that much traffic on the internet while we were sleeping! We were very careful to exit apps on AppleTV after we were done streaming for the night (not logging out, but exiting to the main screen) and closed all apps on our phones before we've been going to bed.


I have an encrypted SSD plugged into each coputer via the USB-C port of each of those devices so I have a physical backup. Since that's all within my home network, I wouldn't expect there to be any traffic coming to my iMac from the Apple data server. I used to use Dropbox but really don't any more. I do have Microsoft OneNote with cloud connectivity but I've been using that for a long time, too (several years) without any issues.


Since the IP address from the Data Center was communicating only with my iMac, I shut off my iMac for the night and checked data consumption over the past hour. It's only 1GB in an hour versus what I was seeing when I was on that particular computer. I've left everything else alone.


I haven't heard the issues about Antivirus and VPN but I'll have a look at what you're saying, then will weigh the pros and cons. I've been very happy with the brand I chose. Tech support has been great and there have been malware intercepted before anything bad has happened. VPN isn't something I use often. I find that it causes web connectivity to be problematic with some sites, but the Antivirus app I've been using for almost 4 years has been nearly flawless. I'd hate to think that they're harvesting data and selling it but I will have a closer look. Thanks for the warning.


Something changed in January and I've got to get to the bottom of it. I have 10 days remaining and only 200GB before I hit the 1.2TB cap and risk penalties.


I'll post an update tomorrow with the data consumption. When I checked previously, I was seeing anywhere from 7GB to 10GB consumption over night. Our daily use is around 50GB per day and a vast majority of the day, I'm not streaming movies or TV shows and I'm only reading web contents. I have no gaming consoles connected in my house either. It's completely baffling.

Jan 21, 2024 6:16 PM in response to Nyobie

Nyobie wrote:


Also worth noting is that I've increased our data speed from 800 GB/s to 1000 GB/s also on 1/5/24. Data cap is 1.2TB for each month (1/1/24 through 1/31/24 I believe - Comcast measures upload/download data for any given month which is asynchronous with their billing cycle).

First, you need to take care with your exponents. 1000 GB/s = 1 TB/s huh? Maybe you mean 1 Gb/s, which is about 1/8 of 1 GB/s.


If your data cap is 1.2 TB/month (do you have the exponent right and bytes versus bits correct here?), that's about 5 Mb/s for 1 month on a 24/7 basis, nonstop. That's remarkable, that's like downloading continuous 1080 HD video for 30 days straight, 24/7. What is going on?


The good news is that, as we say in engineering, if you have a big signal, you can find the source. You have a "big signal." How many people are using how many devices in the residence? Do you know what each is doing? Is there a chance someone is up at night doing bit torrent, watching who knows what, or interacting with others on the internet in some way?


The thing to do here is one by one, eliminate things one by one to find the culprit(s). Shut down (power off) devices, one by one, for 24-hr periods to see what the effect is. If you trace this to a specific iMac, look in Activity Monitor to see what process is responsible for such downloading. In fact, look in Activity Monitor for all the Macs. You haven't said who is using what in your local network, but if people are playing online games (in browsers, on iPhones, on iPads) that can chew up massive amounts of bandwidth. Also look on all computers (About This Mac ... System Report) to see what might have been installed at the end of December or early January that might be doing something different from before. But something is doing the equivalent of HD 1080 video 24/7 every day, this should not be that hard to find. Just power down each device for 24-48 hours, one by one, as I suggested before.


Does your router have diagnostics you can turn on the see data rates for each device?

Jan 24, 2024 10:06 AM in response to Nyobie

Nyobie wrote:

I think something was going on with my iCloud account and possibly related to the enormous Photo gallery I have. I've got approximately 42K photos and just under 2K videos.


Yes, that number of photos being "synced" with iCloud would certainly give the nsurlsessiond process a "workout." You may want to consider storing your photos on a local NAS instead of iCloud, especially because your ISP caps your data ... but, of course, that would be your decision to make.


FYI, Wireshark is a very valuable tool, but does require a fairly step learning curve. Not so much for the tool itself, but understanding how the OSI model fits in with the traffic you capture. You will also find out where you place your capture probes will make a difference on what you can collect.


In case you were not aware there is an excellent (& free) online TCP/IP Guide that is definitely worth taking a look at ... and, as you can imagine, there are numerous resources online to help you with Wireshark, and performing data captures overall. Here's one: https://packetlife.net/blog/2008/oct/18/cheat-sheets-tcpdump-and-wireshark/

Jan 23, 2024 11:34 AM in response to Nyobie

I believe I've narrowed the issue to my iMAC of the 10 or so Apple devices on my home network.


There seems to be something going on with a rogue process called nsurlsessiond which I'm now in the process of figuring out how to address. I started a new thread on that topic. I don't expect this one to go much further but I would like to come back and make an update if indeed, addressing that process fixes my excessive data usage issue.

Jan 24, 2024 10:42 AM in response to Nyobie

First, there is no reason to ever install or run any 3rd party "cleaning", "optimizing", "speed-up", anti-virus, VPN or security apps on your Mac.  This documents describe what you need to know and do in order to protect your Mac: Effective defenses against malware and other threats - Apple Community and Recognize and avoid phishing messages, phony support calls, and other scams - Apple Support.  


There are no known viruses, i.e. self propagating, for Macs.  There are, however, adware and malware which require the user to install although unwittingly most of the time thru sneaky links, etc.   


Anti Virus developers try to group all types as viruses into their ad campaigns of fear.  They do a poor job of the detecting and isolating the adware and malware.  Since there are no viruses these apps use up a lot of system resources searching for what is non-existent and adversely affect system and app performance.


There is one app, Malwarebytes, which was developed by a long time contributor to these forums and a highly respected member of the computer security community, that is designed solely to seek out adware and known malware and remove it.  The free version is more than adequate for most users.  


Unless you're using a true VPN tunnel, such as between you and your employer's, school's or bank's servers, they provide false security from a privacy standpoint. 


I recommend you uninstall Bitdefender according to the developer's instructions. You can check to see if you've removed all of the supporting files by downloading and running the shareware app Find Any File to search for any files with the application's or the developer's name in the file name.  For the Bitdefender software you'd do the following search(es): 


1 - Name contains bitdefender

2 - Name contains antivirusformac


Any files that are found can be dragged from the search results window to the Desktop or Trash bin in the Dock for deletion.


FAF can search areas that Spotlight can't like invisible folders, system folders and packages.  


If you get warnings that the file can't be deleted because it is in use or used by another app boot into Safe Mode according to How to use safe mode on your Mac and delete from there.


Note:  if you have a wireless keyboard with rechargeable batteries connect it with its charging cable before booting into Safe Mode.  This makes it act as a wired keyboard as will assure a successful boot into Safe Mode.



Jan 25, 2024 3:00 AM in response to Nyobie

In addition to the above uninstalled apps, this morning, I uninstalled a few other apps that I've decided also need to go in order to figure out why I keep seeing a CPU process that's running > 100% (remindd). The other process nsurlsessiond is no longer showing up as an issue in Activity Monitor. Steps I've taken along the way seems to have gotten rid of that issue. Out of curiosity, I want to see if I can induce the issue by re-installing bitdefender suite and keep an eye on data streams as well as CPU performance.


I've uninstalled Adobe's Photoshop suite along with an authenticity checker app of theirs and an empty Adobe folder.


I've uninstalled Angry IP Scanner.


I've uninstalled Duplicate File Finder.


Then I re-ran EtreCheck. I'm still getting a diagnostics warning for a Major issue having to do with Kernel panics and will keep an eye on what I'm working on when this happens. The last time it happened was 3 days ago. When I can locate a wired keyboard and mouse, I'll reboot and go into the special menus available to run RAM tests. I have 128GB RAM and would like to verify that RAM is ok.




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Excessive data use on my internet plan and troubleshooting question

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