I once believed that the print statement on line 341 was bound to fail, because you're using parentheses to delimit a string that contains parens itself. But then runrig set me straight. Anyway, it's not the greatest idea to use parens as delimiters when the text might contain unmatched parens -- try using a "here document" syntax instead:
print <<EOT; <tr $style> <td>$autor</td> <td></td> <td rowspan=2 valign=top>$vendor</td> <td rowspan=2 valign=top></td> <td rowspan=2 valign=top align=center>$year</td> <td rowspan=2 valign=top></td> <td rowspan=2 valign=top>R\$&nbsp;$price</td> ... EOT
I do not believe your localized error message is an indication of malicious code; given that I see some variable names in Portuguese, I'm guessing it's either just hard-coded somewhere deep in your program, or you're not as EN-localized as you think. In any language, "Connection closed by foreign host" is a very common message and in no way does it imply that you've been hax0red.

In reply to Re: Strange die message at print line: hacker attack? by gamache
in thread Strange die message at print line: hacker attack? by Andre_br

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