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#11
Hi, I work for imonomy and we are looking into this issue. It would really help us develop a fix for this if someone could either send us the preload.js file you are being prompted to download or tell me which site you were on when this prompt came up? This discussion came up elsewhere and one of the fixes was pretty much as described here along with changing your BitTorrent client. Take a look here: Pop-up titled keeps running. Screenshots included. : windows
I am not being rude on you. In this thread my concern is only the thread starter. I posted for him. And I will wait for his reply only. If my post does not work for him, I will suggest him for the next possible steps.
If you have any issue, same or different, start your own thread. Dont jump in the other ones threads with a notion that some other instruction does not work for you. You will get proper advise in your thread. Two issues may look same; but there may be huge differences based on the hardware/software environment of the different computers.
For windows 7 users, this is the proper place to get help: Windows 7 Help Forums
Anyway, it may be a standalone malware/adware or it may be some sort of malware/adware integrated with the browser. So malware cleaner and adware cleaners are also the "must to follow" steps.
If it is a standalone one, cleaning startup will stop it. But it is a browser integrated thing; then it will need additional steps.
That is interesting. The solutions I've seen in other discussion fora suggest that removing uTorrent and running a malware sweep of your system clears out the scripts responsible. Just regarding uTorrent, are you using an ad-supported version of uTorrent or the paid, ad-free version?
If it was Chrome, were you browsing particular web pages when the script prompting you to download preload.js came up? We're trying to identify the source of the issue and that information would really help.
I had exactly the same problem. The Female Voice incident really threw me as I'm especially vigilant for vectors for ransomware. Imonomy is an ad image service that is apparently used by uTorrent. I never saw it until I upped my subscription to Malwarebytes, and now it would seem it's not just installing automatically, but prompting me. It appears to be harmless enough, but still...