Question:
I have McAfee, but another page comes up by itself trying to advertise a dating site, how do i stop it?
David F
2007-03-16 21:11:41 UTC
My font also changes on internet explorer, it's bigger than normal, but my speed seems to be ok.
Six answers:
Renee
2007-03-16 21:16:41 UTC
You probably need Ad-Aware SE Personal edition (it's a free software program). This takes care of unwanted pop up advertisements such as what you've mentioned....I'm not sure why your font is big, but you can just adjust it in "view", "text size" (in your menu at the top of the page) and change it to small, medium, etc....
G
2007-03-17 04:19:49 UTC
To change your font -



View -> Text Size -> Increase/Normal/Decrease

Ctrl++ (hold the control key and hit the plus key) makes the text larger.

Ctrl+- (hold the control key and hit the minus key) makes the text smaller.

Ctrl+0 (hold the control key and hit zero) makes the text normal size.

Ctrl+scroll mouse wheel



About the pop up, try scanning your PC with these 2 free scans to see if your PC is infected with adware.



Spybot - Search & Destroy detects and removes spyware, a relatively new kind of threat not yet covered by common anti-virus applications. Spyware silently tracks your surfing behaviour to create a marketing profile for you that is transmitted without your knowledge to the compilers and sold to advertising companies. If you see new toolbars in your Internet Explorer that you haven't intentionally installed, if your browser crashes inexplicably, or if your home page has been "hijacked" (or changed without your knowledge), your computer is most probably infected with spyware. Even if you don't see the symptoms, your computer may be infected, because more and more spyware is emerging. Spybot-S&D is free.

http://www.spybot.info/



http://superantispyware.com/

SUPERAntiSpyware is the most thorough scanner on the market. Our Multi-Dimensional Scanning and Process Interrogation Technology will detect spyware that other products miss! SUPERAntiSpyware will remove ALL the Spyware, NOT just the easy ones!

Easily remove over 100,000 pests such as SmitFraud, Vundo, WinFixer, SpyAxe, SpyFalcon, WinAntiVirus, AntiVermins and thousands more!





If you dont have a pop up blocker, you can install one free.

http://toolbar.yahoo.com
2007-03-17 04:21:05 UTC
You should activate your popup blocker, if the page that comes up, is a popup..Click tools, popup blocker, turn on popup blocker. To change your font size, hold down the Ctrl key, and turn the wheel on your mouse..Good Luck..
Charles X
2007-03-17 04:17:12 UTC
As far as the popup.. The best program I've seen is Stopzilla. Sorry.. I can't help you with the other matters.
Matt M
2007-03-17 04:16:02 UTC
just download firefox and use it as your internet browser..honestly IE is horrible and firefox is 10x better blocking popups and garbage like that.... www.firefox.com
2007-03-17 04:17:07 UTC
dump mcafee



99% of all internet problems can be attributed to the wrong set of Web browser and Email clients in coordination of the

AV/ Spyware / Firewall software.





Get the following, all are free for a safe surfing experience, with proven track records and do not take up

system resources like Norton or McAffee.

install in SAFE mode with networking ( hit F-8 at boot time ), run them all in SAFE mode

with networking as you'll need it for the updates all the programs below will need.

Turn off RESTORE and the RECYLE BIN temporarily as virii can regenerate / reinfect even if you delete

them with both services on. After all the scanning and cleaning after a 2nd reboot and one last

scan do you turn both of them back on.



ANTI VIRAL



AVG (free) http://free.grisoft.com/





FIREWALL



ZoneAlarm http://www.zonelabs.com/store/content/company/products/znalm/freeDownload.jsp



WEB BROWSER - http://www.mozilla.org/products/firefox



EMAIL use thunderbird. It has a good built in spam filter and learns when you teach it. http://www.mozilla.org/products/thunderbird



SPYWARE



http://www.lavasoftusa.com/software/adaware/



http://www.safer-networking.org/en/index.html



Once you set it all up create 3 email accounts..



a hotmail or yahoo account for web "verification", this account you will not care if it get spammed



a sub account ( from the master account )to your ISP that you use for logons, this is the one you use for personal

emails only to trusted people and banking, ebay and paypal. Never use the account for anything else than that,

you find spam is low to non existant if you follow this rule, and even if it does become spam laden, then you

can delete the account and create a new sub account and do all the email updates to ebay, paypal, banks and your

freinds.



finally your master account from your ISP, this one you NEVER use, it's only kept for creating sub accounts since

changing the master account is a real pain.





and if you have a wireless router follow these tips,





1. Use WPA encryption (WPA-PSK) it's less crackable then WEP.



2. Make a passphrase that is upper & lower case and has some numbers thrown in there as well, again harder to crack.

some like mAkE1t5eCurE0rel53 and as long as possible.



3. Use MAC access control so only you or authorized PC's can connect (even if you do have encryption turned on)



4. Turn off DHCP use static addresses.



5. Turn off SSID (and change it) unless your card really needs it (some do)



6. Change username/password of access unit front end



7. Ensure you have the usual firewall enabled on your PC.



8. Paranoia rules, turn WLAN off if your not using it :)





one last tip

control panel---administrator tools--services--messenger



right clik on it

stop the service

then disable it

save changes





********** sidebar ****************



You've seen the Internet ads: Click here to get your free laptop computer, iPod, trip to Bermuda . . .



Ever wondered what would happen if you tried to claim the freebie?



Generally, you'd end up earning the reward by answering surveys, completing product offers or referring friends.





The free iPod that costs you



you respond to a free iPod ad. After several requests to sign up for various services, you'll realize that the free iPod was not free at all. The killing part is, you end up actually committing to a few services and will be billed for them, but because you get caught in a loop of pop-up windows and surveys, you then become frustrated and will not follow through to get the free iPod.





Free cell phone! What free cell phone?



After going through 11 questionnaires and saying no to all, you finally get to the last, and they say you must at least pick two items in order to be able to get whatever they are giving away.

For instance, If you answer a free cell phone ad and go through 11-12 questionnaires and at first it says no obligation to buy anything, but when you get to the last , it will say you must at least try magazines for 30 days and they're hoping you'll will forget to cancel before the 30 days. And the kicker was once you agree to the free trial of magazines, they never ever mentioned the free cell phone again, and then you will be watching and waiting to see what they do to your credit card and if I get the phone. By the way, once you give one company your credit card number you get charged $1 to $4.95 on your card, for other items you never heard of before and have to take the time to call them and get them to remove it.





Free spam! Act now!



Yes, they are all scams. There is always a 'short' questionnaire. You always have to answer many, many questions if you want this or that. You always have to give your e-mail address and other information. You always have to check 'yes' for at least one in order to qualify and continue. If you ever get to the end after 45 minutes or so -- yeah, short -- you end up having to buy or sign up for something or your name is put into a lottery for a chance to win. I, in my stupidity, have done this several times. Always thinking maybe this one is legit. Not! You'll have never get the free product or the free gift card, groceries, movie tickets, etc. Then your e-mail is bombarded with hundreds of advertisements that you can never seem to stop unless you change your e-mail address. What a deal. Moral of this story is: Nothing is free.







If you filled out the questionnaire online for a $50 gift certificate for dinner at a well-known restaurant chain. They ask for your name and the rest of your personal information and e-mail address. Then the questionnaire opens up a new page and asks you if you would be interested in e-mails for specials on items that you could use in your life. You fill that page out then here comes another page with more questions. After about five pages I gave up. It just wouldn't quit. It was like a stupid carrot that they had hanging out there that you could never reach. I turned my computer off and said, 'Forget that!' After that you'll check your e-mail for about a week and when you do you'll had over 200 spam messages, even sex ones. You'll never get a dinner certificate. You'll end up had to closing that e-mail account because the spam garbage will not quit. Moral of the story: There is no free lunch on the Internet.







After you give your e-mail address and answered all the questions, you'll be informed that you have to order (buy) one item from several areas in order to receive the freebie. So you end canceling the 'adventure' and then you'll be inundated with junk mail ever since. Never again. Big scam for addresses to sell, etc.



Complete the never-ending survey



If you try to win a few of those free products, butsoon you'll be convinced they are the biggest fraud out there. For example, you'll spend three hours filling out questionnaires only to find out they never end, and the couple of times you'll get to the end , and they will want you to buy something and you know what that means: They are asking for your credit card information.





Free (with shipping and handling)



If you purchase some software from a company that advertises if you pay for shipping you get four software titles for free.

A few weeks later you'll get a $49 charge to your account. If you look up the company on the Web and none of the links you'll find will go to the company. If you try the phone number that showed up on your statement and they simply tell you they are not available and to try back later before they hang up on you. So you'll be dissatisfied, and searched the Internet a little more only to find you're were not the only one to be scammed. Turns out that they never tell you that you are signing up for a subscription but send you software and you have a short time frame to return it or be charged. Total scam.

Free (with Social Security and credit card numbers)





Free (with purchase)



"If Your dumb enough you'll answer ads for 'free' products. Please note the quote marks -- they're intentional. Many of the Internet freebies have extremely long forms to fill out, complete with a host of ads you need to reply 'not interested' to or else you'll receive hundreds of solicitations from various companies.

The 'gift certificates' offered for sometimes hundreds of dollars almost always involve purchasing something, somewhere along the line or becoming a trial member of something. At which point you need to pay for your subscription or membership upfront, with the caveat it's 'fully refundable' within strict parameters. As the saying goes, there's no such thing as a free lunch!


This content was originally posted on Y! Answers, a Q&A website that shut down in 2021.
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