McAfee message on my Mac
I just received a message that my new MAC has an expired McAfee program and I am infected.
[Re-Titled by Moderator]
Mac mini, macOS 13.0
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I just received a message that my new MAC has an expired McAfee program and I am infected.
[Re-Titled by Moderator]
Mac mini, macOS 13.0
As stated, this is a popup that probably occurred on a website you visited. Unless you installed it before, it likely is a phishing attempt, an attempt to steal personal information by giving you a click-bait message for you to try to download something nefarious for your system.
It may happen on a web browser or email. When it happens on a web browser, command-option-escape can give you the option to force quit the web browser (any opened pages will need to be reopened that you trust), and when you reload the web browser, hold the 'shift' key while you launch it. This gives you the opportunity to open the web browser without loading the last loaded page (the nefarious page). As long as you do not call, email, or text the nefarious message sender, you should be OK. Just clear your browser history and start fresh.
If it is an email and you weren't expecting it, just delete the email, and even mark it as spam if you have that feature enabled on your email.
Macs do not need anti-virus or optimization utilities. Any utilities that purport to speed your Mac actually do the contrary, and may have advertisements to encourage you to buy their utility.
The most important thing to do with your Mac is backup your data.
As stated, this is a popup that probably occurred on a website you visited. Unless you installed it before, it likely is a phishing attempt, an attempt to steal personal information by giving you a click-bait message for you to try to download something nefarious for your system.
It may happen on a web browser or email. When it happens on a web browser, command-option-escape can give you the option to force quit the web browser (any opened pages will need to be reopened that you trust), and when you reload the web browser, hold the 'shift' key while you launch it. This gives you the opportunity to open the web browser without loading the last loaded page (the nefarious page). As long as you do not call, email, or text the nefarious message sender, you should be OK. Just clear your browser history and start fresh.
If it is an email and you weren't expecting it, just delete the email, and even mark it as spam if you have that feature enabled on your email.
Macs do not need anti-virus or optimization utilities. Any utilities that purport to speed your Mac actually do the contrary, and may have advertisements to encourage you to buy their utility.
The most important thing to do with your Mac is backup your data.
debraturner1958 wrote:
I just received a message that my new MAC has an expired McAfee program and I am infected.
Have you ever had it....?
ref
Recognize and avoid phishing messages, phony support calls ...
What about that message makes you think it is legitimate.
Why does it not scream out to you, "Hi, I sent you this fake message to scam you out of your money?"
thank you so much!
McAfee message on my Mac