Sounds to me like you either have some sort of remote viewing software installed that's modifying memory addresses wrong, or you've got faulty drivers installed somewhere along the line. This sort of BSoD with win32k.sys as the culprit is generally linked with those two problems. A ChkDsk won't hurt, but it doesn't sound like that's the cause of this issue.
0xc0000005 is a generic flag saying that a process tried to access memory outside of where it was allowed to.
0xa8cdfae4 is the memory address it was trying to access.
0xc0000005 is a generic flag saying that a process tried to access memory outside of where it was allowed to.
0xa8cdfae4 is the memory address it was trying to access.