I was hoping that clicking the "Rollback Driver" button would have solved the issue, but I will assume from your post that the button was greyed out and unavialble for you to use.
Since you mentioned "broadcasting" I guess we are talking about wireless, so first question is...
Do you have an option to test using a cable (Cat5 ethernet) connection to see if the issue persists with a physical connection.
Did anything happen "A couple weeks ago", new hardware, or router, new software or software updates, especially internet security suites or network management software? Did your proximity (physical distance) from the router change? Have you added any new wireless devices (cordless phones, etc.,) to your environment? Did your neighbor recently bring up a new and more powerful wireless wireless network (we've seen things like this happen with strong wireless "N" networks, in apartment buildings, or dorms overwhelming weaker networks resulting in problems)?
Have you tried resetting the router to factory defaults by using the reset button on the back (ususally recessed in a small hole)?
Which wireless card are you using according to Acer, that laptop might have either a Atheros, Broadcom or Intel wireless network card? You might try checking the actuall wireless adapter manufacturer's website and see if there is a recent driver update for your specific card.
And additionally check with your router manufacturer and see if there is a firmware update for your product that may help also.
Additonally check safemode with networking and see if the problem persists as well as testing manually assigning static values for the IPv4 properties of the wireless network adapater and see if that resolves the issue through multiple reboots.
Keep us posted.