Krieger
Member
I have been having an issue with the local hard drive search engine on my laptop. Every time I try to locate a file on my hard drive using the my computer search in local disk C, I keep getting redirected to Bing through my default browser which is google chrome when I'm actually trying to locate documents on my hard drive. Can anyone help?
I have installed utorrent and imgburn a week ago to convert some movies to DVD. The problem seems to have started around that time. This was a red flag of potential adware that found it's way on my local hard drive. I'm usually good at avoiding freeware which always lead to adware infections like fake antivirus software and browser hijackers. Another red flag was the fact that the Bing results are similar to what I did a local disk search for but less relevant and more add like most of the time.
This should be taken as a serious problem at Microsoft and they should find a fix in the next update of windows 7 and other currently supported versions of windows still venerable to adware infections. It's not exactly a security threat but it may as well be if basic offline utilities get effected that way so easily by adware. I usually don't trust 3rd party software but imgburn and utorrent are pretty reputable and work well if you know how to dodge the freeware junk. I ran Adw Remover and it couldn't find any adware or anything. Microsoft really should treat adware and malware as big of a threat as viruses and do what they can to build up more protection against it.
I have installed utorrent and imgburn a week ago to convert some movies to DVD. The problem seems to have started around that time. This was a red flag of potential adware that found it's way on my local hard drive. I'm usually good at avoiding freeware which always lead to adware infections like fake antivirus software and browser hijackers. Another red flag was the fact that the Bing results are similar to what I did a local disk search for but less relevant and more add like most of the time.
This should be taken as a serious problem at Microsoft and they should find a fix in the next update of windows 7 and other currently supported versions of windows still venerable to adware infections. It's not exactly a security threat but it may as well be if basic offline utilities get effected that way so easily by adware. I usually don't trust 3rd party software but imgburn and utorrent are pretty reputable and work well if you know how to dodge the freeware junk. I ran Adw Remover and it couldn't find any adware or anything. Microsoft really should treat adware and malware as big of a threat as viruses and do what they can to build up more protection against it.
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