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  1. Port 80 is being used by SYSTEM (PID 4), what is that?

    Code sample

    sc stop "MsDepSvc"
    sc config "MsDepSvc" start= disabled
  2. "Why is System PID 4 having so much disk activity?"

  3. Process Explorer: How to find out what System PID 4 is

  4. port - Windows Process from PID - Stack Overflow

  5. People also ask
    PID 4 is the system process - if PID 4 is holding a port open, it means that some device driver has opened the port. Given that it's port 445, my guess is that it's the CIFS network filesystem or server. Try doing a "net stop srv" and "net stop rdr" from an elevated command prompt - that should shut down the service using the port.
    From this answer and a blog post I figured that anything to do with PID 4 is probably a Windows Service, so you may want to look for the relevant services in services.msc. Also, this process is run by System, which is considered another "logged-on" user.
    You'll notice that all of the PIDs are divisible by 4. 4 is therefore the first PID available after 0 (which is the Idle process). For the reason that that is true, see this MSDN post by Raymond Chen: Process and thread IDs are multiples of four as a side-effect of code re-use.
    World Wide Web Publishing service in Windows 8 64 for me did the trick. HTTP service state can help you to identify the running services in case of PID 4. Run netsh http show servicestate and look at registered URLs or Logging information. Ok, after searching the web for a while I found a solution to my problem.
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  8. PID 4 - High disk activity - What and why? - Microsoft Community

  9. Pid no Steam

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