musicFinder Search

The musicFinder Search program from Myappzcenter.com is promoted via Chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/musicfinder-search/ebhcflbfnmlobiplacldedddeplbjfoc to enable the Omnibox (the address bar in Google Chrome) to search for music. The Omnibox is an integral part of the Google Chrome browser, and its ability to work as a search bar has been one of the advantages of the browser since its release to the public. The Omnibox in Chrome is powered by Google.com by default, but users can install apps like the musicFinder Search browser extension to modify its behavior. The musicFinder Search is known to ask for browser privileges that may allow it to show in-browser alerts, read your data on sites and change your default search provider to Search.myappzcenter.com.

The musicFinder Search is perceived as a Potentially Unwanted Program (PUP) by Myappzcenter.com that is part of a network of pages dedicated to making browser redirects. The musicFinder Search is a part of a network that includes software publishers such as Newtabtools.com, Myappzcenter.com, Playzonenow.com, Betterappz.com, Amazeappz.com, Theappzworld.com and many others. These pages are used to promote browser extensions, which are believed to be deployed by programmers employed by Eanswers.com. The Eanswers.com domain offers news and entertainment content, but it is related to questionable browser extensions, which are designed to send users to the Eanswers.com sub-domains and have them transferred to customized versions of Yahoo. The musicFinder Search may change your default search provider to Search.myappzcenter.com. Search.myappzcenter.com is identical to Music.eanswers.com that we have mentioned in our articles on the musicJunkie Search by Theappjunkies.com, the OnlineMusic Search by Bettersearchtools.com and the SongsCenter Search by Playmediacenter.com. Web surfers who have the musicFinder Search running inside their browser might notice that it performs redirects to h[tt]ps://search.yahoo[.]com/yhs/search?hspart=iba&hsimp=yhs-1&type=49ds_7115_CHW_EN&p=[search terms]. You may want to remove musicFinder Search as it may be used to collect information about your Internet history, downloaded content and search terms, which may be transmitted to marketers.

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