Earlier this week I downloaded the update, and then was directed to a page to 
pick a free gift app or something purporting to be from you-all for getting the 
update.  I selected something called ZIPdownload or something like that.  Soon 
every few links or even just blank parts of webpages I clicked on would instead 
open a new tab (I'm using Google Chrome Browser) offering me various convoluted 
consumer surveys, prizes, gift cards, etc.  The URLs of the pages 'popped-up' 
in this way included elements similar to those of the website I was trying to 
read or click from, so at first I assumed they were a new kind of annoying 
popup ad not yet blocked by normal popup blocking.


Then today I started seeing ads on Wikipedia!  They had a fundraiser recently, 
so I wondered if they'd had to just cave and sell space.  These ads were 
churning fast too, unlike normal web ads, and they were starting videos and 
audio automatically in their banners and squares.  This all became intrusive, 
so, suspicious, I found this page 
https://blog.wikimedia.org/2012/05/14/ads-on-wikipedia-your-computer-infected-malware/.
  So I went into my browser extensions and found something unfamiliar to me 
calling itself SySaver and not saying anything about what it is (and I am 
extremely conservative about installing new programs/etc. on my laptop here, as 
well as knowledgeable about computers and software in general).  I googled 
SySaver and found mentions connecting it with ecommerce, and thought it might 
be the culprit, even though it's not the one mentioned in the 2012 Wikimedia 
article.  So I Trashed it in Extensions, Uninstalled it via Control Panel, 
noticed it had been installed just on 9/26, two days ago, same as ZIPdownload, 
so for good measure I uninstalled ZIPdownload too.  Somewhere while I was doing 
this, my browser got closed w/o asking me, so I reopened it, restored my closed 
tabs via the yellow warning bar, and the ads seem to have "disappeared" from 
Wiikipedia, as well as the extraneous neo-popups... so far.


Sorry if this is long-winded, but I never know what will be helpful to you-all, 
so I figure to err on the side of caution and give you these details.




---Pete in Pennsylvania

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