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Trying to get rid of Pop Ups in Safari 8.0.8

Apple MacBook Pro (15-inch 2.4/2.2GHz)

Processor 2.4 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo

Memory 4 GB 667 MHz DDR2 SDRAM

Hard Drive SATA 160 GB / 40.75 GB Free

OSX Yosemite 10.10.5

Safari 8.0.8


Hi,

I am a Soldier in Afghanistan in great need of someones help in ref to getting rid of constant pop-ups and trying to clean up my Mac so it will perform a little bit better. I am not a computer genius by any stretch of the imagination, however, I am quite a bit better than most in terms of the basics. From doing a little bit of research, I know that the following information may be useful in terms of me helping you help me.


In finder, I went to "Go", "Go to Folder" and typed the following search criteria:


~/Library/LaunchAgents:

Results:

palmail-1-2.ver

com.adobe.ARM.202f4087f2bbde52e3ac2df389f53a4f123223c9cc56a8fd83a6f7ae.plist

com.apple.FolderActions.folders.plist

palmall-1-2_updater.plist

palmall-1-2_updater.sh


/Library/LaunchAgents:

Results:

com.brother.LOGINserver.plist

com.courbashguana.agent.plist

com.ecamm.iglasses3agent.plist

com.google.keystone.agent.plist

com.paragon.updater.plist

com.teamviewer.teamviewer_desktop.plist

com.teamviewer.teamviewer.plist

com.thursby.pkard.tokendagent.plist

com.vsearch.agent.plist

org.macosforge.xquartz.startx.plist


/Library/LaunchDaemons:

Results:

com.adobe.fpsaud.plist

com.courbashguana.daemon.plist

com.courbashguana.helper.plist

com.google.keystone.daemon.plist

com.huawei.mbbservice.plist

com.teamviewer.Helper.plist

com.teamviewer.teamviewer_service.plist

com.vsearch.daemon.plist

com.vsearch.helper.plist

com.vyprvpn.authorization.plist

org.macosforge.xquartz.privileged_startx.plist

MacBook Pro

Posted on Sep 10, 2015 10:45 AM

Reply
Question marked as Best reply

Posted on Sep 10, 2015 11:16 AM

From the report:

com.vsearch.agent.plist

com.vsearch.daemon.plist

com.vsearch.helper.plist


Adware is installed without your knowledge.



1. Use free Malwarebytes Anti-Malware for Mac/ AdwareMedic to remove adware


http://www.adwaremedic.com/index.php


Download, install , open, and run it by clicking “Scan for Adware” button to remove adware.

Once done, quit Malwarebytes Anti-Malware.


or


Remove the adware manually by following the “HowTo” from Apple.

http://support.apple.com/en-us/HT203987


2. Safari > Preferences > Extensions

Turn all extensions off and relaunch Safari. Test.

Turn those on one by one and test.


3. Safari > Preferences > Search > Search Engine :

Select your preferred search engine.


Note: Malwarebytes Anti-Malware for Mac/ AdwareMedic is recommended by Apple support.

3 replies
Question marked as Best reply

Sep 10, 2015 11:16 AM in response to FLSTFI03

From the report:

com.vsearch.agent.plist

com.vsearch.daemon.plist

com.vsearch.helper.plist


Adware is installed without your knowledge.



1. Use free Malwarebytes Anti-Malware for Mac/ AdwareMedic to remove adware


http://www.adwaremedic.com/index.php


Download, install , open, and run it by clicking “Scan for Adware” button to remove adware.

Once done, quit Malwarebytes Anti-Malware.


or


Remove the adware manually by following the “HowTo” from Apple.

http://support.apple.com/en-us/HT203987


2. Safari > Preferences > Extensions

Turn all extensions off and relaunch Safari. Test.

Turn those on one by one and test.


3. Safari > Preferences > Search > Search Engine :

Select your preferred search engine.


Note: Malwarebytes Anti-Malware for Mac/ AdwareMedic is recommended by Apple support.

Sep 10, 2015 11:47 AM in response to FLSTFI03

Back up your Mac if you have not done so already. To learn how to use Time Machine read Mac Basics: Time Machine backs up your Mac - Apple Support.

You inadvertently installed adware. You do not need to download or install anything to fix it.


For a description of how this may have occurred, how to avoid it in the future, and for Apple's recommended actions read How to install adware. Apple's instructions are linked in the Recovery Procedure near the end of that document. Read and follow them carefully. Pay particular attention to the easily overlooked passages directing you to restart your Mac when required.


Review your Gatekeeper settings: OS X : About Gatekeeper - Apple Support. Gatekeeper is designed to help prevent you from inadvertently installing garbage software.


... trying to clean up my Mac

Whatever you do, do not download or install any product claiming to magically "clean up" or "speed up" or "boost" or "accelerate" or "optimize" your Mac, regardless of the source. Without exception, they will do the opposite.

Sep 10, 2015 12:22 PM in response to FLSTFI03

A

First, never use any kind of "anti-virus" or "anti-malware" software on a Mac. That's how you create problems, not how you solve them.

Back up all data before making any changes.

In the folder arranged as shown in the first list, please delete these items:

#1, #4, and #5 ("PalMall")

In the second folder:

#2 and #9 ("VSearch")

You may be prompted for your password.

In the third folder:

#2, #3, #8, and #9 ("VSearch")

Restart the computer.

Uninstall any Safari extensions you don't know you need. If in doubt, remove all of them. None is needed for normal operation.

Do the equivalent in the Chrome and Firefox browsers, if you use either of those.

Reset the Safari home page, if it was changed. You may need to do the same in the other browsers.

Open your home folder by clicking the house icon with your name in the sidebar of a Finder window. If there is a subfolder named "Applications" (different from the main Applications folder), remove anything in it that you don't recognize.

These steps will permanently inactivate the malware, as long as you never reinstall it. A few small files may remain in hidden folders, but they have no effect.

The instructions above apply only to you. I'm including more general—and complete—self-contained removal instructions below for the benefit of others who may find this discussion. You can skip the remaining steps, but you should read them.

B (optional)

You installed one or more variants of the "VSearch" ad-injection malware. Follow Apple Support's instructions to remove it.

If you have trouble following those instructions, see below.

Malware is always changing to get around the defenses against it. This procedure works as of now, as far as I know. It may not work in the future. Anyone finding this comment a few days or more after it was posted should look for a more recent discussion, or start a new one.

The VSearch malware tries to hide itself by varying the names of the files it installs. To remove it, you must first identify the naming pattern.

Triple-click the line below on this page to select it, then copy the text to the Clipboard by pressing the key combination command-C:

/Library/LaunchDaemons

In the Finder, select

Go Go to Folder...

from the menu bar and paste into the box that opens by pressing command-V. You won't see what you pasted because a line break is included. Press return.

A folder named "LaunchDaemons" may open. Look inside it for two files with names of the form

com.something.daemon.plist

and

com.something.helper.plist

Here something is a variable string of characters, which can be different in each VSearch infection. So far it has always been an alphanumeric string without punctuation, such as "cloud," "dot," "highway," "submarine," or "trusteddownloads." Sometimes it's a meaningless string such as "e8dec5ae7fc75c28" rather than a word. Sometimes the string is "apple," and then you must be especially careful not to delete the wrong files, because many built-in OS X files have similar names.

You could have more than one copy of the malware, with different values of something.

If you find these files, leave the LaunchDaemons folder open, and open the following folder in the same way:

/Library/LaunchAgents

In this folder, there may be a file named

com.something.agent.plist

where the string something is the same as before.

If you feel confident that you've identified the above files, back up all data, then drag just those three files—nothing else—to the Trash. You may be prompted for your administrator login password. Close the Finder windows and restart the computer.

Don't delete the "LaunchAgents" or "LaunchDaemons" folder or anything else inside either one.

The malware is now permanently inactivated, as long as you never reinstall it. You can stop here if you like, or you can remove two remaining components for the sake of completeness.

Open this folder:

/Library/Application Support

If it has a subfolder named just

something

where something is the same string you saw before, drag that subfolder to the Trash and close the window.

Don't delete the "Application Support" folder or anything else inside it.

Finally, in this folder:

/System/Library/Frameworks

there may be an item named exactly

v.framework

or an item named

something.framework

Again, something is the same string as before.

This item is actually a folder, though it has a different icon than usual. Drag it to the Trash and close the window.

Don't delete the "Frameworks" folder or anything else inside it.

If you didn't find the files or you're not sure about the identification, post what you found.

If in doubt, or if you have no backups, change nothing at all.

The trouble may have started when you downloaded and ran an application called "MPlayerX." That's the name of a legitimate free movie player, but the name is also used fraudulently to distribute VSearch. If there is an item with that name in the Applications folder, delete it. I don't recommend that you install the genuine "MPlayerX," because it's hosted on the rogue "SourceForge" website and is bundled with other malware.

This trojan is often found on illegal websites that traffic in pirated content such as movies. If you, or anyone else who uses the computer, visit such sites and follow prompts to install software, you can expect more of the same, and worse, to follow. Never install any software that you downloaded from a bittorrent, or that was downloaded by someone else from an unknown source.

Trying to get rid of Pop Ups in Safari 8.0.8

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