I was checking my firewall logs, and found a ton of attempted connections from port 41170. I ran Netcat to receive those connections, and here is the result:
ÉÜ âë ÿÿÿÿ  1SF  ŽSK  MNC  CNBlubsterCV2.5.0VLT3q_ å× ÿÿÿÿ  1SF  ŽSK  MNC  CNBlubsterCV2.5.0VLT3¡Ð æ² ÿÿÿÿ  1SF  ŽSK  MNC  CNBlubsterCV2.5.0VLT3
I checked out BlubsterCV, then blubster, and it turns out blubster is a p2p program.

http://www.denison.edu/computing/students/blubster.html

This thread says the p2p program has horrible programming,
It's harmful - While the technical details are boring, Blubster and Piolet are effectively overloading our local network due to its inefficient and almost malicious programming. The file sharing application has proven to be very nasty to networks if left unchecked. During a 10 minute interval, we are seeing a few Blubster\Piolet users create more traffic on our local network than the rest of the campus produced during a similar 10 minute interval last year. Since this software has become popular, you might have noticed how the network responsiveness slowly degraded.
We will disconnect - We are requesting all students completely uninstall the Blubster software. Students using Blubster\Piolet will be notified and asked to uninstall. Students failing to respond to the request will be disconnected until they contact the HelpDesk.
This sounds like adware, but I was wondering why Blubster would have to send me packets constantly for it to work? Is is an adware worm, or do people actually use this like kazaa?

http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&l...41170+blubster

This google shows that their are removal tools available, so this confuses me. Is blubster a worm, adware, or just a suckass p2p program with horrible programming? It makes a ton of traffic.