Windows 10 will reach EOS (end of support) on October 14, 2025. For more information, see this article.

Etsi tuesta

Avoid support scams. We will never ask you to call or text a phone number or share personal information. Please report suspicious activity using the “Report Abuse” option.

Lue lisää

Is this update site legitimate?

  • 1 vastaus
  • 4 henkilöllä on sama ongelma
  • 13 näyttöä
  • Viimeisin kirjoittaja philipp

more options

Periodically I get a splash screen from the following site:

"https://ooshidustindiaz.com/6721239261176/09fcf3d0999eeb6a9cfd551af51c6ac2/cde77081541c8fc6451c22f4700b3e1c.html"

It says there is a "critical Firefox update" required. I get this "splash" every browsing session.

It does NOT look legit to me, so I have not executed the update.

Periodically I get a splash screen from the following site: "https://ooshidustindiaz.com/6721239261176/09fcf3d0999eeb6a9cfd551af51c6ac2/cde77081541c8fc6451c22f4700b3e1c.html" It says there is a "critical Firefox update" required. I get this "splash" every browsing session. It does NOT look legit to me, so I have not executed the update.

Valittu ratkaisu

hi, this is a scam tactic that is trying to trick you into installing malware, so don't download or execute this kind of stuff just because of a popup or redirect on a website! updates are handled automatically by firefox so you don't have to download anything for that (and you can always initiate a manual check for updates in the firefox menu ≡ > help ? > about firefox).

we suspect this is coming form "malvertising" (=ads placed on legitimate websites that redirect you to this fraudulent message), so using an adblocking addon like https://addons.mozilla.org/firefox/addon/ublock-origin/ would also help with that.

I found a fake Firefox update

Lue tämä vastaus kontekstissaan 👍 1

Kaikki vastaukset (1)

more options

Valittu ratkaisu

hi, this is a scam tactic that is trying to trick you into installing malware, so don't download or execute this kind of stuff just because of a popup or redirect on a website! updates are handled automatically by firefox so you don't have to download anything for that (and you can always initiate a manual check for updates in the firefox menu ≡ > help ? > about firefox).

we suspect this is coming form "malvertising" (=ads placed on legitimate websites that redirect you to this fraudulent message), so using an adblocking addon like https://addons.mozilla.org/firefox/addon/ublock-origin/ would also help with that.

I found a fake Firefox update