Flashback Malware Removal Tool 1.0 for Mac can be downloaded from our software library for free. This Mac download was scanned by our antivirus and was rated as malware free. The actual developer of this free software for Mac is Apple, Inc. The program lies within Internet & Network. Lately I keep get odd little blips on my Mac screen when I open apps and or use various browsers. I uspect that spyware or some other malware somehow has been installed on my machine. I have since installed highly recommended always-on security apps like Avast and Avira and Kasperski for live filtering (thinking that what one does not catch another will) along run-only-on-command apps like BitDefender and ClamX (each catches items the other misses). I am still seeing the little blips, if fewer than before, so I wonder if there is still some root level malware that has not yet been detected and removed. I am looking for solutions. One option is upgrading to Mavericks, but I still havesome criticval apps that are not yet Mavericks compliant, so that delays the upgrade. Another option is wiping my disk, doing a clean reinstall of the OS, and re-installing apps one at a time (means I lose days of productivity as all get rebuilt). Another option is finding and installing better spyware detection and removal app (or apps) than I have installed so far. I searched the Apple support communities and found some older related posts, some going back to 2007 or 2009, which are not relevant today, such as the advice to use MacScan (no longer deemed a viable app), and the ongoing debate whether MacKeeper itself is malware. I want feedback and suggestions for the hard realities of life on the net at the beginning of 2014. In answering my request, you might help thousands of other Mac users. Given the politics you've described, I don't doubt that you may have been dealing with nefarious agents. Anything is possible, but so far this has all been fairy magic. Do you think you're important enough for these nefarious actors to go to all this trouble? WZZZ, I want to say, 'No, I am not worth the bother,' especially since my role in the political campaign has not been pivotal, even if I have been visible and vocal. I would have ignored the little blips and odd flashes on my Mac had I not heard similar anomalies reported by the person whose own Mac was hacked, the same person who ran social networking for our campaign, whose several websites were crashed, even a retail business website. I would have dismissed all this as silly nonsense had not my main website been hacked and crashed about three months ago, had not my secondary website just this past weekend somehow been redirected from its home server. I cannot prove anything nor blame anyone with solid certainty, one way or another. As you note, if my security concerns do indeed have any basis in fact (and I began this thread solely to help me find out if my system has been compromised -- or not), if I do as several of you advised and rebuild my Mac from the bottom up, I now accept the sad truth that a committed hacker can get in no matter what I do, no matter what kind of heavy-duty door locks and network firewalls I may install. Perhaps this entire thread has been a lesson in futility. Perhaps a deeper lesson is that the nature of society has shifted beyond our traditional means of coping. Perhaps the most tragic and lamentable insight from this whole thread is that a hard-headed realist like me (who has other things to do), now feels any need to seek elusive answers about the shadowy underbelly of our world -- but that is a topic for some other forum. 99.99% of malware is completely hidden from sight. Malware authors aren't interested in having their exploits detected by suspicious users. While malware can't be entirely ruled out in your case, you are probably experiencing some kind of software or hardware problem (maybe the GPU.) Using a constantly on AV program runs the risk of slowing down your Mac, or creating other issues. In addition, no AV program can identify an infection that hasn't yet been catalogued, and most AV programs use heuristics--in plain talk they are making educated guesses, which often lead to false positives. You may still want to run some kind of AV. The best bet out there is probably Sophos, or VirusBarrier Express (scans only manually and makes no system modifications. MacKeeper is total garbage. Although it does now use a respectable AV program, Avira, you could run that without buying the whole package. ClamXav is a decent program run by a developer with considerable integrity, but it has fallen way behind in its detection rate. And MacScan is pathetic at identifying malware. But is the best at finding known keyloggers. And as far as I know, most if not all of those will have needed to be installed with physical access to the Mac. Here's a good read on this subject. Judahman wrote: Lately I keep get odd little blips on my Mac screen when I open apps and or use various browsers. I uspect that spyware or some other malware somehow has been installed on my machine.
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