'System Warning Alert' Pop-Ups
'System Warning Alert' Pop-Ups are fake warnings delivered using the form of a pop-up, a smaller window that shows up on top of something else. In this case, the pop-ups show up on top of a malicious scam website. Perhaps it is professionalizing.space, but an entirely different website could be set up to represent the same pop-ups as well. It should not be hard to close the pop-up and the webpage showing it, but the message represented via it can be very intimidating and cause you to pause for a moment. This moment could be enough for schemers to trick you. ...
Screen Dream Toolbar
Screen Dream Toolbar is a browser extension that offers access to “exciting new trailers.” Thus, if you are looking for such content daily and want to be able to access it faster, the extension might sound perfect for you. However, we do not think that reading an application’s description is enough to decide whether you should install it. Specialists recommend learning much more details before making the final decision. If you are ready to learn more about this browser extension, we invite you to read our full report. ...
ZoNiSoNaL Ransomware
It does not take much for malware to slither into Windows systems that lack basic security. The attackers behind ZoNiSoNaL Ransomware can use spam emails, RDP vulnerabilities, software bundles promoted on unreliable file-sharing sites, and even other infections to drop the threat. If there is no security software to warn the victim about malware or, better yet, to catch and remove it automatically, your personal files are bound to suffer. When this malicious threat slithers in, it is meant to encrypt all personal files that exist on your system, including documents that you might need to work or school and photos that might hold precious memories for you. ...
My Search Finder
My Search Finder sounds like an extension that is meant to help search the web and find useful results. It also sounds like a tool that can personalize the results and make the web search more efficient overall. Of course, it is not a good idea to judge an application by its name because names, descriptions, and first impressions are exploited by malware developers, distributors, and schemers. According to our research team, this extension, although it claims to help surf the web, is nothing more than an advertising tool, and if you use it, you are likely to be flooded with all sorts of ads and sponsored links from unknown parties. ...
OFFWHITE Ransomware
If your Windows operating system is vulnerable at the moment, we suggest securing it as soon as possible because OFFWHITE Ransomware is a monstrous infection that could try to exploit vulnerabilities. It is most likely to use RDP security backdoors to slither in, and you could be tricked into executing it yourself. If trusted security software exists to guard you and your operating system against malware attacks, it should be able to locate and remove the threat before it encrypts files. ...
Tidenous.com
If you have been randomly routed to Tidenous.com, you should immediately exit the webpage and perhaps even close the browser. Why were you redirected to this website? Was it because you clicked a strange pop-up or advertisement that warned you about junk files on your Windows operating system? Random pop-ups and ads you see online cannot know what kinds of junk files exist on your computer, and so that should automatically make you weary. Perhaps you were redirected to the website via a different website? ...
C4H Ransomware
No one wants to be infected with ransomware, but sometimes programs like C4H Ransomware manage to enter our systems. Then, we have to focus hard on removing them, and looking for ways to restore our files. Although there is no public decryption tool available at the moment, you might still be able to restore the files encrypted by C4H Ransomware. Be sure to address a professional technician who could help you with the problem at hand. You should also learn more about ransomware in general, so you could avoid similar intruders in the future. ...
Volgmer
Volgmer falls under the classification of Trojans. Such malicious applications enter systems without any permission. They can also hide on infected devices without being noticed and perform tasks like gathering, creating, or deleting data. If you want to know what this Trojan is capable of, we invite you to read our full report in which we also talk about its possible distribution channels as well as its removal. We would like to stress that we cannot guarantee that the instructions located below the article will help erase Volgmer. ...
Qewe Ransomware
Qewe Ransomware is a malicious application that encrypts files and places the .qewe extension at the end of their titles. Once files become encrypted, they can no longer be opened. Even if you delete the malware’s added extension, your system should still be unable to read the encrypted files. The malware’s creators may have decryption tools that could restore all the affected files, but, unfortunately, they offer them only to users who are willing to pay ransom. We recommend against it because hackers might not bother to send the decryption tools and if it happens, you might lose not only your files but also your money. ...
AppGo LiveSearch
You have to be careful about the tools you use to browse the web because not all of them can be trusted. AppGo LiveSearch, according to our research team, is one of those tools that you have to be cautious about because although it might appear to present normal results, it can present advertisements and links prepared by unknown third parties too. Furthermore, it has been found that this extension also can collect and leak personal information. Even though only selected parties have access to this information, we are not informed who they are, and so trusting the extension is difficult. ...