Tag Archives: Coup Pop-Up

Remove ane.couphit.com Pop-Up Ads

Sound familiar? You see pop-up ads from ane.couphit.com while browsing websites that usually don’t advertise in pop-up windows. The pop-ups manage to circumvent the built-in pop-up blockers in Google Chrome, Mozilla Firefox, Internet Explorer or Safari. Perhaps the ane.couphit.com pop-ups show up when clicking search results from Google? Or does the popups appear even when you’re not browsing?

Here is how the ane.couphit.com ad looked like on my machine:

ane.couphit.com pop-up

If this description sounds like your experience, you almost certainly have some adware installed on your machine that pops up the ane.couphit.com ads. There’s no use contacting the owners of the site you currently were browsing. The advertisements are not coming from them. I’ll try help you with the ane.couphit.com removal in this blog post.

I found the ane.couphit.com pop-up on one of the lab machines where I have some adware running. I’ve talked about this in some of the previous blog posts. The adware was installed on purpose, and from time to time I check if something new has appeared, such as pop-up windows, new tabs in the browsers, injected ads on website that usually don’t show ads, or if some new files have been saved to the hard-drive.

ane.couphit.com was registered on 2014-09-18. ane.couphit.com resolves to 208.43.241.244.

So, how do you remove the ane.couphit.com pop-up ads? On the machine where I got the ane.couphit.com ads I had TinyWallet, BrowserWarden and BlockAndSurf installed. I removed them with FreeFixer and that stopped the ane.couphit.com pop-ups and all the other ads I was getting in Firefox.

BlockAndSurf was the adware that caused the pop-ups in my case.

It seems as ane.couphit.com is getting quite a lot of traffic, based on Alexa’s traffic rank:

couphit.com traffic

The issue with this type of pop-up is that it can be initiated by many variants of adware. This makes it impossible to say exactly what you need to remove to stop the pop-ups.

Anyway, here’s my suggestion for the ane.couphit.com ads removal:

The first thing I would do to remove the ane.couphit.com pop-ups is to examine the programs installed on the machine, by opening the “Uninstall programs” dialog. You can reach this dialog from the Windows Control Panel. If you are using one of the more recent versions of Windows OS you can just type in “uninstall” in the Control Panel’s search field to find that dialog:
Uninstall a program search

Click on the “Uninstall a program” link and the Uninstall programs dialog will open up:
Uninstall a program dialog

Do you see something suspect listed there or something that you don’t remember installing? Tip: Sort on the “Installed On” column to see if something was installed approximately about the same time as you started getting the ane.couphit.com pop-ups.

Then you can examine you browser add-ons. Adware often show up under the add-ons menu in Google Chrome, Mozilla Firefox, Internet Explorer, Safari or Opera. Is there something that looks suspicious? Anything that you don’t remember installing?
Firefox add-ons manager

I think most users will be able to identify and uninstall the adware with the steps outlined above, but in case that did not work you can try the FreeFixer removal tool to identify and remove the adware. FreeFixer is a freeware tool that I started develop about 8 years ago. It’s a tool designed to manually track down and uninstall unwanted software. When you’ve found the unwanted files you can simply tick a checkbox and click on the Fix button to remove the unwanted file.

FreeFixer’s removal feature is not crippled like many other removal tools out there. It won’t require you to pay for the program just when you are about to remove the unwanted files.

And if you’re having issues determining if a file is legit or malware in the FreeFixer scan report, click on the More Info link for the file. That will open up a web page which contains additional details about the file. On that web page, check out the VirusTotal report which can be very useful:

FreeFixer More Info link example
An example of FreeFixer’s “More Info” links. Click for full size.

Here’s a video tutorial showing FreeFixer in action removing the ane.couphit.com pop-up ads:

Are you a Mac or Linux user and get the ane.couphit.com pop-ups? What did you do to stop the pop-up in your browser? Please share in the comments below. Thank you!

Did you find any adware on your machine? Did that stop the ane.couphit.com ads? Please post the name of the adware you uninstalled from your machine in the comment below.

Thank you!

Remove ain.couptwo.com Pop-Up Ads

Does this sound like your story? You see pop-up ads from ain.couptwo.com while browsing websites that typically don’t advertise in pop-up windows. The pop ups manage to escape the built-in pop-up blockers in Google Chrome, Mozilla Firefox, Internet Explorer, Safari or Opera. Maybe the ain.couptwo.com pop-ups show up when clicking search results from Google? Or does the pop-ups appear even when you’re not browsing?

Here’s how the ain.couptwo.com pop-up looked like when I got it on my system:

ain.couptwo.com pop-up

Does this sound like your system, you probably have some adware installed on your computer that pops up the ain.couptwo.com ads. So there’s no idea contacting the owner of the site you were browsing. The advertisements are not coming from them. I’ll do my best to help you with the ain.couptwo.com removal in this blog post.

Those that have been reading this blog already know this, but for new visitors: Not long ago I dedicated some of my lab machines and wilfully installed a few adware programs on them. Since then I have been tracking the behaviour on these systems to see what kinds of advertisements that are displayed. I’m also looking on other interesting things such as if the adware auto-updates, or if it downloads and installs additional unwanted software on the computers. I first noticed the ain.couptwo.com pop-up on one of these lab machines.

ain.couptwo.com resolves to 208.43.241.247. ain.couptwo.com was created on 2014-09-18.

So, how do you remove the ain.couptwo.com pop-up ads? On the machine where I got the ain.couptwo.com ads I had TinyWallet, BrowserWarden and BlockAndSurf installed. I removed them with FreeFixer and that stopped the ain.couptwo.com pop-ups and all the other ads I was getting in Firefox.

BlockAndSurf was the adware that caused the pop-ups in my case.

The problem with this type of pop up is that it can be popped up by many variants of adware. This makes it impossible to say exactly what you need to remove to stop the pop-ups.

Anyway, here’s my suggestion for the ain.couptwo.com ads removal:

  1. What software do you have installed if you look in the Add/Remove programs dialog in the Windows Control Panel? Something that you don’t remember installing yourself or that was recently installed?
  2. You can also review the add-ons you installed in your browsers. Same thing here, do you see anything that you don’t remember installing?
  3. If that didn’t solve the problem, you can give FreeFixer a try. FreeFixer is built to assist users when manually tracking down adware and other types of unwanted software. It is a freeware utility that I’ve been working since 2006 and it scans your system at lots of locations where unwanted software is known to hook into your computer. If you would like to get additional details about a file in FreeFixer’s scan result, you can just click the More Info link for that file and a web page with a VirusTotal report will open up, which can be very useful to determine if the file is safe or malware:

    FreeFixer More Info link example
    An example of FreeFixer’s “More Info” links. Click for full size.

Here you can see FreeFixer in action removing the adware that caused the ain.couptwo.com pop-up ads:

Are you a Mac or Linux user and get the ain.couptwo.com popups? What did you do to stop the pop-up in your browser? Please share in the comments below. Thank you very much!

Did you find any adware on your machine? Did that stop the ain.couptwo.com ads? Please post the name of the adware you uninstalled from your machine in the comment below.

Thank you!

Update 2014-12-18: I’ve been documenting this type of pop-ups. I’m calling them “Coup Pop-Ups“, since they often use “Coup” in the domain name. For example, couptwo.com and coupthree.com. But what about one, four, five, six, etc? I think the following domains are registered by the same company, and that we might see them in pop-ups in the future:

  • CoupFive.com
  • CoupSix.com

Remove dbd.cooldeas.com Pop-Up Ads

Did you just get interrupted by a pop-up ad from dbd.cooldeas.com? You are not alone. I also get the dbd.cooldeas.com pop-ups while browsing. Do the pop-ups also circumvent the pop-up blocker in Google Chrome, Mozilla Firefox, Internet Explorer or Safari. Then read on…

Here’s a screenshot of the dbd.cooldeas.com pop-up ad when it showed up on my system:

dbd.cooldeas.com pop-up

If you also see this on your computer, you most likely have some adware installed on your machine that pops up the dbd.cooldeas.com ads. So don’t blame the people that owns the web site you were at, the ads are most likely not coming from that site, but from the adware that’s running on your computer. I’ll do my best to help you remove the dbd.cooldeas.com pop up in this blog post.

If you have been following this blog already know this, but if you are new: Not long ago I dedicated some of my lab machines and intentionally installed a few adware programs on them. Since then I’ve been following the actions on these computers to see what kinds of advertisements that are displayed. I’m also looking on other interesting things such as if the adware auto-updates, or if it downloads and installs additional unwanted software on the computers. I first found the dbd.cooldeas.com pop-up on one of these lab computers.

dbd.cooldeas.com was created on 2014-11-23. dbd.cooldeas.com resolves to 208.43.241.245.

So, how do you remove the dbd.cooldeas.com pop-up ads? On the machine where I got the dbd.cooldeas.com ads I had TinyWallet, BlockAndSurf and BrowserWarden installed. I removed them with FreeFixer and that stopped the dbd.cooldeas.com pop-ups and all the other ads I was getting in Firefox.

BlockAndSurf was the adware that caused the pop-ups in my case.

The issue with this type of pop-up is that it can be launched by many variants of adware, not just the adware on my computer. This makes it impossible to say exactly what you need to remove to stop the pop-ups.

Anyway, here’s my suggestion for the dbd.cooldeas.com ads removal:

  1. What software do you have installed if you look in the Add/Remove programs dialog in the Windows Control Panel? Something that you don’t remember installing yourself or that was recently installed?
  2. You can also review the add-ons that you have in your browser. Same thing here, do you see something that you don’t remember installing?
  3. If that didn’t solve the problem, you can give FreeFixer a try. FreeFixer is built to assist users when manually tracking down adware and other types of unwanted software. It is a freeware utility that I’ve been working since 2006 and it scans your computer at lots of locations where unwanted software is known to hook into your machine. If you would like to get additional details about a file in FreeFixer’s scan result, you can just click the More Info link for that file and a web page with a VirusTotal report will open up, which can be very useful to determine if the file is safe or malware:

    FreeFixer More Info link example
    An example of FreeFixer’s “More Info” links. Click for full size.

Here’s a video tutorial showing FreeFixer in action removing the dbd.cooldeas.com pop-up ads:

Did this blog post help you to remove the dbd.cooldeas.com pop-up ads? Please let me know or how I can improve this blog post.

Thank you!

Remove prg.coolappsa.com Pop-Up Ads

Did you just get a pop-up from prg.coolappsa.com and wonder where it came from? Did the prg.coolappsa.com ad appear to have been launched from a web site that under normal circumstances don’t use aggressive advertising such as pop-up windows? Or did the prg.coolappsa.com pop-up show up while you clicked a link on one of the major search engines, such as Google, Bing or Yahoo?

Here’s how the prg.coolappsa.com pop-up looked like when I got it on my computer:

The prg.coolappsa.com pop-up ad in Mozilla Firefox

 

When I first spotted the pop-up, it redirected to adcash.com, which then redirected to the actual ad.

If you also see this on your system, you most likely have some adware installed on your system that pops up the prg.coolappsa.com ads. There’s no use contacting the owners of the site you currently were browsing. The ads are not coming from them. I’ll try help you with the prg.coolappsa.com removal in this blog post.

Those that have been spending some time on this blog already know this, but for new visitors: A little while back I dedicated a few of my lab computers and intentionally installed a few adware programs on them. Since then I’ve been tracking the behaviour on these machines to see what kinds of advertisements that are displayed. I’m also looking on other interesting things such as if the adware updates itself, or if it installs additional unwanted software on the computers. I first spotted the prg.coolappsa.com pop-up on one of these lab computers.

prg.coolappsa.com was registered on 2014-11-23. prg.coolappsa.com resolves to the 208.43.241.244 address. According to YouGetSignal.com’s reverse ip lookup, the following domains is also resolving to the same IP:

  • control.staticlyrics.com
  • dss.drivefor.net
  • gir.driveropti.net
  • gym.macpath.net
  • jco.mappre.net
  • nsl.mapticket.net

So, how do you remove the prg.coolappsa.com pop-up ads? On the machine where I got the prg.coolappsa.com ads I had TinyWallet, BlockAndSurf and Browser Warden installed. I removed them with FreeFixer and that stopped the prg.coolappsa.com pop-ups and all the other ads I was getting in Mozilla Firefox.

BlockAndSurf was the adware that caused the pop-ups in my case. The pop-up was labelled “BlockAndSurf“.

Ads by BlockAndSurf pop-up

What label did your pop-up ad have? Please share in the comments area below.

The bad news with pop-ups like this one is that it can be initiated by many variants of adware. I think that adware such as CheckMeUp, New Player, Salus and SaferSurf can also be responsible for the prg.coolappsa.com popups. And there are probably other variants too. This makes it impossible to say exactly what you need to remove to stop the pop-ups.

So, what can be done? To remove the prg.coolappsa.com pop-up ads you need to examine your computer for adware or other types of unwanted software and uninstall it. Here’s my suggested removal procedure:

The first thing I would do to remove the prg.coolappsa.com pop-ups is to examine the software installed on the machine, by opening the “Uninstall programs” dialog. You can find this dialog from the Windows Control Panel. If you are using one of the more recent versions of Windows you can just type in “uninstall” in the Control Panel’s search field to find that dialog:
Uninstall a program search

Click on the “Uninstall a program” link and the Uninstall programs dialog will open up:
Uninstall a program dialog

Do you see something suspicious listed there or something that you don’t remember installing? Tip: Sort on the “Installed On” column to see if some program was installed about the same time as you started getting the prg.coolappsa.com pop-ups.

Then I would check the browser add-ons. Adware often appear under the add-ons menu in Mozilla Firefox, Google Chrome, Internet Explorer or Safari. Is there anything that looks suspicious? Anything that you don’t remember installing?
Firefox add-ons manager

I think you will be able to track down and uninstall the adware with the steps outlined above, but in case that did not work you can try the FreeFixer removal tool to identify and remove the adware. FreeFixer is a freeware tool that I started develop about 8 years ago. Freefixer is a tool built to manually track down and uninstall unwanted software. When you’ve found the unwanted files you can simply tick a checkbox and click on the Fix button to remove the unwanted file.

FreeFixer’s removal feature is not locked like many other removal tools out there. It will not require you to pay for the program just when you are about to remove the unwanted files.

And if you’re having difficulties determining if a file is legit or adware in FreeFixer’s scan report, click on the More Info link for the file. That will open up a web page which contains more details about the file. On that web page, check out the VirusTotal report which can be very useful:

FreeFixer More Info link example
An example of FreeFixer’s “More Info” links. Click for full size.

Here’s a video guide showing how to remove the prg.coolappsa.com pop-up ads with FreeFixer:

Did this blog post help you to remove the prg.coolappsa.com pop-up ads? Please let me know or how I can improve this blog post.

Thank you!

Remove ale.coupthree.com Pop-Up Ads

Does this sound like what you are seeing right now? You see pop-up ads from ale.coupthree.com while browsing sites that mostly don’t advertise in pop-up windows. The pop-ups manage to circumvent the built-in pop-up blockers in Google Chrome, Mozilla Firefox, Internet Explorer, Safari or Opera. Maybe the ale.coupthree.com popups appear when clicking search results from the Google search engine? Or does the pop-ups appear even when you’re not browsing?

Here is a screenshot on the ale.coupthree.com pop-up from my computer:ale.coupthree.com

In my case, the pop-up sometimes redirected to adcash.com, which then redirect me again to the actual advert, but in most cases the browser remained at ale.coupthree.com and showed various types of ads, mostly casino/gambling related.

If this sounds like what you are seeing on your system, you almost certainly have some adware installed on your system that pops up the ale.coupthree.com ads. Contacting the site owner would be a waste of time. The advertisements are not coming from them. I’ll try help you with the ale.coupthree.com removal in this blog post.

Those that have been visiting this blog already know this, but here we go: Some time ago I dedicated some of my lab computers and deliberately installed a few adware programs on them. Since then I have been following the actions on these machines to see what kinds of advertisements that are displayed. I’m also looking on other interesting things such as if the adware updates itself, or if it downloads and installs additional unwanted software on the computers. I first found the ale.coupthree.com pop-up on one of these lab systems.

ale.coupthree.com resolves to the 208.43.241.245 IP address. Here’s a bunch of other domains resolving that server according to YouGetSignal.com’s reverse IP:

  • article.wn.com
  • control.staticlyrics.com
  • dvl.cooloideas.com
  • enl.trepage.net
  • gip.driverdiv.net
  • gir.driveropti.net
  • gys.mappingdo.net
  • jxs.mappingjava.net
  • jxw.javadrive.net
  • nsl.mapticket.net
  • vei.screedkeywaybrookite.com

So, how do you remove the ale.coupthree.com pop-up ads? On the machine where I got the ale.coupthree.com ads I had TinyWallet, BrowserWarden and BlockAndSurf installed. I removed them with FreeFixer and that stopped the ale.coupthree.com pop-ups and all the other ads I was getting in Mozilla Firefox.

BlockAndSurf was the adware that caused the pop-ups in my case. The pop-up was labelled “Ads by BlockAndSurf“.

Ads by BlockAndSurf pop-up

What label did your pop-up ad have? Please share by posting a comment below.

The problem with pop-ups such as this one is that it can be popped up by many variants of adware. I think that adware such as SpeedCheck, CheckMeUp, SaferSurf and NewPlayer can also be responsible for the ale.coupthree.com popups. And there are probably other variants too. This makes it impossible to say exactly what you need to remove to stop the pop-ups.

To remove the ale.coupthree.com pop-up ads you need to review your system for adware or other types of unwanted software and uninstall it. Here’s my suggested removal procedure:

The first thing I would do to remove the ale.coupthree.com pop-ups is to examine the programs installed on the machine, by opening the “Uninstall programs” dialog. You can reach this dialog from the Windows Control Panel. If you are using one of the more recent versions of Windows you can just type in “uninstall” in the Control Panel’s search field to find that dialog:
Uninstall a program search

Click on the “Uninstall a program” link and the Uninstall programs dialog will open up:
Uninstall a program dialog

Do you see something dubious in there or something that you don’t remember installing? Tip: Sort on the “Installed On” column to see if something was installed approximately about the same time as you started getting the ale.coupthree.com pop-ups.

Then you can examine you browser add-ons. Adware often appear under the add-ons dialog in Mozilla Firefox, Google Chrome, Internet Explorer or Safari. Is there anything that looks suspicious? Something that you don’t remember installing?
Firefox add-ons manager

I think most users will be able to find and remove the adware with the steps outlined above, but in case that did not work you can try the FreeFixer removal tool to identify and remove the adware. FreeFixer is a freeware tool that I started develop about 8 years ago. Freefixer is a tool designed to manually track down and remove unwanted software. When you’ve identified the unwanted files you can simply tick a checkbox and click on the Fix button to remove the unwanted file.

FreeFixer’s removal feature is not locked like many other removal tools out there. It will not require you to purchase the program just when you are about to remove the unwanted files.

And if you’re having difficulties figuring out if a file is clean or adware in FreeFixer’s scan report, click on the More Info link for the file. That will open up a web page which contains more information about the file. On that web page, check out the VirusTotal report which can be quite useful:

FreeFixer More Info link example
An example of FreeFixer’s “More Info” links. Click for full size.

Here’s a video tutorial which shows FreeFixer in action removing the adware that caused the ale.coupthree.com pop-up ads:

Are you a Mac or Linux user and get the ale.coupthree.com pop ups? What did you do to stop the pop-up in your browser? Please share in the comments below. Thanks!

Did this blog post help you to remove the ale.coupthree.com pop-up ads? Please let me know or how I can improve this blog post.

Thank you!

Remove ask.couplose.com Pop-Up Ads

Does this sound familiar? You see pop-up ads from ask.couplose.com while browsing websites that usually don’t advertise in pop-up windows. The pop-ups manage to find a way round the built-in pop-up blockers in Mozilla Firefox, Google Chrome, Internet Explorer or Safari. Maybe the ask.couplose.com pop-ups appear when clicking search results from a Google search? Or does the pop-ups appear even when you’re not browsing?

Here’s how the ask.couplose.com pop-up looked like when I got it on my machine.ask.couplose.com

(I know, lots of watermarks. Have to do it to stop the copy-cats.)

Does this sounds like your computer, you almost certainly have some adware installed on your system that pop up the ask.couplose.com ads. Don’t flame the people that owns the website you were at, the ads are almost certainly not coming from that website, but from the adware that’s running on your computer. I’ll do my best to help you remove the ask.couplose.com in this blog post.

For those that are new to the blog: Not long ago I dedicated some of my lab computers and deliberately installed a few adware programs on them. I have been monitoring the behaviour on these computers to see what kinds of ads that are displayed. I’m also looking on other interesting things such as if the adware updates itself automatically, or if it downloads and installs additional unwanted software on the machines. I first found the couplose.com pop-up on one of these lab systems.

ask.couplose.com resolves to the 208.43.241.245 address. ask.couplose.com was registered on 2014-09-18.

So, how do you remove the ask.couplose.com pop-up ads? On the machine where I got the ask.couplose.com ads I had TinyWallet, BuyNSave and BlockAndSurf installed. I removed them with FreeFixer and that stopped the ask.couplose.com pop-ups and all the other ads I was getting in Mozilla Firefox.

BlockAndSurf was the adware that caused the pop-ups in my case. I know this since the pop-up ad had a label with the adware name: “BlockAndSurf“.

bxh.mulctsamsaracorbel.com ads by BlockAndSurf

What label did your pop-up ad have? Please share in the comments area below.

The issue with this type of pop-up is that it can be launched by many variants of adware. I think that adware such as NewPlayer, Salus, CheckMeUp and SaferSurf can also be responsible for the couplose.com popups. And there are probably other variants too. This makes it impossible to say exactly what you need to remove to stop the pop-ups.

Anyway, here’s my suggestion for the ask.couplose.com ads removal:

  1. Check what programs you have installed in the Add/Remove programs dialog in the Windows Control Panel. Do you see something that you don’t remember installing or that was recently installed?
  2. You can also examine the add-ons you installed in your browsers. Same thing here, do you see something that you don’t remember installing?
  3. If that didn’t help, I’d recommend a scan with FreeFixer to manually track down the adware. FreeFixer is a freeware tool that I’m working on that scans your computer at lots of locations, such as browser add-ons, processes, Windows services, recently modified files, etc. If you want to get additional details about a file in the scan result, you can click the More Info link for that file and a web page will open up with a VirusTotal report which will be very useful to determine if the file is safe or malware:

    FreeFixer More Info link example
    An example of FreeFixer’s “More Info” links. Click for full size.

Here’s a video tutorial which shows FreeFixer in action removing adware causing pop-up ads:

Are you a Mac or Linux user and get the ask.couplose.com pop-ups? What did you do to stop the pop-up in your browser? Please share in the comments below. Thanks!

Did you find any adware on your machine? Did that stop the ask.couplose.com ads? Please post the name of the adware you uninstalled from your machine in the comment below.

Thank you!

Remove aft.coupplayoff.com Pop-Up Ads

Did you just get a pop up from aft.coupplayoff.com and ponder where it came from? Did the aft.coupplayoff.com ad appear to have been launched from a web site that under normal circumstances don’t use aggressive advertising such as pop-up windows? Or did the aft.coupplayoff.com pop-up show up while you clicked a link on one of the major search engines, such as Google, Bing or Yahoo?

Here’s how the aft.coupplayoff.com pop-up looked like when I got it on my computer:aft.coupplayoff.com pop-up in Firefox

(I know, lots of watermarks. Have to do it to stop the copy-cats.)

I got the pop-up in Firefox, but it can also appear in Chrome and Internet Explorer. Does this sounds like your experience, you probably have some adware installed on your system that pop up the aft.coupplayoff.com ads.

For those that are new to the blog: Not long ago I dedicated some of my lab machines and deliberately installed some adware programs on them. I’ve been following the behaviour on these computers to see what kinds of advertisements that are displayed. I’m also looking on other interesting things such as if the adware auto-updates, or if it downloads additional unwanted software on the machines. I first found the aft.coupplayoff.com pop-up on one of these lab systems.

So, how do you remove the aft.coupplayoff.com pop-up ads? On the machine where I got the aft.coupplayoff.com ads I had BrowserWarden, BuyNSave and BlockAndSurf installed. I removed them with FreeFixer and that stopped the aft.coupplayoff.com pop-ups and all the other ads I was getting in Mozilla Firefox.

aft.coupplayoff.com resolves to 37.58.101.203. The domain was created 2014-09-18.

BlockAndSurf was the adware that caused the pop-ups in my case. The pop-up was labelled “Ads by BlockAndSurf“.

bxh.mulctsamsaracorbel.com ads by BlockAndSurf

What label did your pop-up ad have? Please share in the comments area.

The issue with this type of pop-up is that it can be launched by many variants of adware. I think that adware such as Salus, CheckMeUp and NewPlayer can also be responsible for the aft.coupplayoff.com popups. And there are probably other variants too. This makes it impossible to say exactly what you need to remove to stop the pop-ups.

Anyway, here’s my suggestion for the aft.coupplayoff.com ads removal:

The first thing I would do to remove the aft.coupplayoff.com pop-ups is to examine the programs installed on the machine, by opening the “Uninstall programs” dialog. You can reach this dialog from the Windows Control Panel. If you are using one of the more recent versions of Windows you can just type in “uninstall” in the Control Panel’s search field to find that dialog:
Uninstall a program search

Click on the “Uninstall a program” link and the Uninstall programs dialog will open up:
Uninstall a program dialog

Do you see something strange-looking in there or something that you don’t remember installing? Tip: Sort on the “Installed On” column to see if some program was installed approximately about the same time as you started seeing the aft.coupplayoff.com pop-ups.

I think you will be able to identify and uninstall the adware with the two steps outlined above, but in case that did not work you can try the FreeFixer removal tool to identify and remove the adware. FreeFixer is a freeware tool that I started develop about 8 years ago. FreeFixer is a tool designed to manually identify and uninstall unwanted software. When you’ve tracked down the unwanted files you can simply tick a checkbox and click on the Fix button to remove the unwanted file.

FreeFixer’s removal feature is not crippled like many other removal tools out there. It won’t require you to pay for the program just when you are about to remove the unwanted files.

And if you’re having issues deciding if a file is legitimate or malware in the FreeFixer scan result, click on the More Info link for the file. That will open up a web page which contains additional details about the file. On that web page, check out the VirusTotal report which can be quite useful:

FreeFixer More Info link example
An example of FreeFixer’s “More Info” links. Click for full size.

Are you a Mac or Linux user and get the aft.coupplayoff.com pop-ups? What did you do to stop the pop-up in your browser? Please share in the comments below. Thank you!

Did this blog post help you to remove the aft.coupplayoff.com pop-up ads? Please let me know or how I can improve this blog post.

Thank you!

Remove ars.couphole.com Pop-Up Ads

Did you just get a pop-up ad from ars.couphole.com and wonder where it came from? Did the ars.couphole.com ad appear to have been popped up from a web site that under normal circumstances don’t use aggressive advertising such as pop-up windows? Or did the ars.couphole.com pop-up show up while you clicked a link on one of the big search engines, such as Google, Bing or Yahoo.?

Here’s how the ars.couphole.com pop-up looked like when I got it on my machine:

ars.couphole.com pop-up

(Sorry for the large number of watermarks. If I don’t add them, the screenshot will be used without attribution at some other blogs)

Does this sounds like what you are seeing, you most likely have some adware installed on your machine that pop up the ars.couphole.com ads. So don’t write angry emails to the site you were browsing, the advertisements are almost certainly not coming from them, but from the adware on your system. I’ll do my best to help you with the ars.couphole.com removal in this blog post.

Those that have been reading this blog already know this, but for new visitors: Recently I dedicated a few of my lab computers and wilfully installed a few adware programs on them. Since then I have been observing the behaviour on these computers to see what kinds of advertisements that are displayed. I’m also looking on other interesting things such as if the adware auto-updates, or if it downloads and installs additional unwanted software on the computers. I first found the ars.couphole.com pop-up on one of these lab machines. I got the pop up in Firefox, but it can appear in Chrome and Internet Explorer too.

ars.couphole.com resolves to the 37.58.101.205 IP address. The ars.couphole.com domain was created on 2014-09-18, and the Whois record was updated today. The domain inb.csrvrgroup.com is mentioned in the URL. That domain seems to appear in all pop-ups of this type.

So, how do you remove the ars.couphole.com pop-up ads? On the machine where I got the ars.couphole.com ads I had BlockAndSurf, TinyWallet and BrowserWarden installed. I removed them with FreeFixer and that stopped the ars.couphole.com pop-ups and all the other ads I was getting in Mozilla Firefox.

BlockAndSurf was the adware that caused the pop-ups in my case. The pop up was labelled “BlockAndSurf“.

bxh.mulctsamsaracorbel.com ads by BlockAndSurf

What label did your pop-up ad have? Please share in the comments area below.

The issue with this type of pop-up is that it can be launched by many variants of adware. I think that adware such as NewPlayer, CheckMeUp and SaferSurf can also be responsible for the ars.couphole.com popups. And there are probably other variants too. This makes it impossible to say exactly what you need to remove to stop the pop-ups.

Anyway, here’s my suggestion for the ars.couphole.com ads removal:

The first thing I would do to remove the ars.couphole.com pop-ups is to examine the programs installed on the machine, by opening the “Uninstall programs” dialog. You can find this dialog from the Windows Control Panel. If you are using one of the more recent versions of Windows you can just type in “uninstall” in the Control Panel’s search field to find that dialog:
Uninstall a program search

Click on the “Uninstall a program” link and the Uninstall programs dialog will open up:
Uninstall a program dialog

Do you see something dubious listed there or something that you don’t remember installing? Tip: Sort on the “Installed On” column to see if some program was installed about the same time as you started seeing the ars.couphole.com pop-ups.

I think you will be able to identify and uninstall the adware with the two steps outlined above, but in case that did not work you can try the FreeFixer removal tool to identify and remove the adware. FreeFixer is a freeware tool that I started develop about 8 years ago. Freefixer is a tool built to manually identify and uninstall unwanted software. When you’ve identified the unwanted files you can simply tick a checkbox and click on the Fix button to remove the unwanted file.

FreeFixer’s removal feature is not locked like many other removal tools out there. It won’t require you to pay for the program just when you are about to remove the unwanted files.

And if you’re having a mess deciding if a file is legit or adware in FreeFixer’s scan report, click on the More Info link for the file. That will open up a web page which contains more details about the file. On that web page, check out the VirusTotal report which can be very useful:

FreeFixer More Info link example
An example of FreeFixer’s “More Info” links. Click for full size.

Are you a Mac or Linux user and get the ars.couphole.com pop-ups? What did you do to stop the pop-up in your browser? Please share in the comments below. Thank you very much!

Did this blog post help you to remove the ars.couphole.com pop-up ads? Please let me know or how I can improve this blog post.

Thank you!

Remove ash.coupbat.com Pop-Ups Ads

Does this sound like your story? You see pop-up ads from ash.coupbat.com while browsing sites that generally don’t advertise in pop-up windows. The pop-ups manage to circumvent the built-in pop-up blockers in Google Chrome, Mozilla Firefox, Internet Explorer or Safari. Perhaps the ash.coupbat.com pop-ups appear when clicking search results from Google? Or does the pop-ups appear even when you’re not browsing?

Here’s how the ash.coupbat.com pop-up looked like when I got it on my computer:

ash.coupbat.com ad

 

(Sorry for the ridiculous use of watermarking. If I don’t add them my screenshots always show up at some copy-cat blogs.)

If this description sounds like what you are seeing, you almost certainly have some adware installed on your machine that pop up the ash.coupbat.com ads. So don’t send angry emails to the site you were browsing, the ads are presumably not coming from them, but from the adware on your machine. I’ll try help you to remove the ash.coupbat.com in this blog post.

If you have been spending some time on this blog already know this, but if you are new: Recently I dedicated a few of my lab machines and purposely installed a few adware programs on them. I’ve been monitoring the actions on these systems to see what kinds of advertisements that are displayed. I’m also looking on other interesting things such as if the adware updates itself, or if it installs additional unwanted software on the systems. I first noticed the ash.coupbat.com pop-up on one of these lab machines.

So, how do you remove the ash.coupbat.com pop-up ads? On the machine where I got the ash.coupbat.com ads I had TinyWallet, BrowserWarden and BlockAndSurf installed. I removed them with FreeFixer and that stopped the ash.coupbat.com pop-ups and all the other ads I was getting in Firefox.

BlockAndSurf was the adware that caused the pop-ups in my case. I could see this since it was kind enough to label the pop-up ad with “Ads by BlockAndSurf“:

Ads by BlockAndSurf pop-up

What label did your pop-up ad have? Please share in the comments area.

The issue with this type of pop-up is that it can be launched by many variants of adware. I think that adware such as NewPlayer, CheckMeUp, Salus and SaferSurf can also be responsible for the ash.coupbat.com popups. And there are probably other variants too. This makes it impossible to say exactly what you need to remove to stop the pop-ups.

Anyway, here’s my suggestion for the ash.coupbat.com ads removal:

The first thing I would do to remove the ash.coupbat.com pop-ups is to examine the software installed on the machine, by opening the “Uninstall programs” dialog. You can find this dialog from the Windows Control Panel. If you are using one of the more recent versions of Windows Operating System you can just type in “uninstall” in the Control Panel’s search field to find that dialog:
Uninstall a program search

Click on the “Uninstall a program” link and the Uninstall programs dialog will open up:
Uninstall a program dialog

Do you see something strange-looking in there or something that you don’t remember installing? Tip: Sort on the “Installed On” column to see if some program was installed about the same time as you started observing the ash.coupbat.com pop-ups.

The next thing to check would be your browser’s add-ons. Adware often appear under the add-ons menu in Google Chrome, Mozilla Firefox, Internet Explorer, Safari or Opera. Is there something that looks suspicious? Anything that you don’t remember installing?
Firefox add-ons manager

I think most users will be able to identify and remove the adware with the two steps outlined above, but in case that did not work you can try the FreeFixer removal tool to identify and remove the adware. FreeFixer is a freeware tool that I’ve developed since 2006. It’s a tool designed to manually identify and uninstall unwanted software. When you’ve found the unwanted files you can simply tick a checkbox and click on the Fix button to remove the unwanted file.

FreeFixer’s removal feature is not locked like many other removal tools out there. It won’t ask pay a fee just when you are about to remove the unwanted files.

And if you’re having difficulties determining if a file is clean or unsafe in the FreeFixer scan report, click on the More Info link for the file. That will open up your web browser with a page which contains more details about the file. On that web page, check out the VirusTotal report which can be quite useful:

FreeFixer More Info link example
An example of FreeFixer’s “More Info” links. Click for full size.

Are you a Mac or Linux user and get the ash.coupbat.com pop-ups? What did you do to stop the pop-up in your browser? Please share in the comments below. Thanks!

Did this blog post help you to remove the ash.coupbat.com pop-ups ads? Please let me know or how I can improve this blog post.

Thank you!

Remove aff.couploss.com Pop-Up Ads

Did you just get a pop-up from aff.couploss.com and wonder where it came from? Did the aff.couploss.com ad appear to have been initiated from a web site that under normal circumstances don’t use aggressive adverting such as pop-up windows? Or did the aff.couploss.com popup show up while you clicked a link on one of the major search engines, such as Google, Bing or Yahoo?aff.couploss.com popup

If this sounds like your story, it’s very likely that you have some unwanted advertising software on your computer. This type of software is often called adware. I’ll try to give you some advice on how to remove the aff.couploss.com pop-ups in this blog post which hopefully will help you to completely stop the popups.

In my case I had an adware called BlockAndSurf installed on my machine which I remove with FreeFixer. Problem solved. As a matter of fact, the pop-up was actually labeled with the adware name. What label did your pop-up have?

Ads by BlockAndSurf pop-up

But the problem is that this type of pop-up is popped up by other adware too, which makes it difficult to say exactly what should be removed.

I would start checking in the Add/Remove programs dialog for something suspicious, then check the browser’s add-on menu.

If you don’t find the adware there, try the FreeFixer removal tool. It’s a free tool that can help you track down and remove the adware. If you find something that looks suspicious in the scan result, click the More Info link to the a VirusTotal report.

FreeFixer More Info Links

What adware did you find on your machine? When you removed them, did that stop the aff.couploss.com pop-up ads?