How to Stop the Popups

How to Stop the Popups


McAfee is tracking an increase in the use of deceptive popups that mislead some users into taking action, while annoying many others.  A significant portion is attributed to browser-based push notifications, and while there are a couple of simple steps users can take to prevent and remediate the situation, there is also some confusion about how these should be handled.


How does this happen?


In many cases scammers use deception to trick users into Allowing push notifications to be delivered to their system.



In other cases, there is no deception involved.  Users willingly opt-in uncoerced.



What happens next?


After Allowing notifications, messages quickly start being received.  Some sites send notifications as often as every minute.


Many messages are deceptive in nature.  Consider this fake alert example.  Clicking the message leads to an imposter Windows Defender alert website, complete with MP3 audio and a phone number to call.




In several other examples, social engineering is crafted around the McAfee name and logo.  Clicking on the messages lead to various websites informing the user their subscription has expired, that McAfee has detected threats on their system, or providing direct links to purchase a McAfee subscription.  Note that “Remove Ads” and similar notification buttons typically lead to the publishers chosen destination rather than anything that would help the user in disabling the popups.  Also note that many of the destination sites themselves prompt the user to Allow more notifications.  This can have a cascading effect where the user is soon flooded with many messages on a regular basis.





How can this be remediated?


First, it’s important to understand that ..

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