PC Repair Clinic

The PC Repair Clinic software is reported to be promoted via pop-up advertisements that are titled 'Your system is heavily damaged by (4) virus!' The scary messages serving the PC Repair Clinic's marketing campaign may be delivered through ad-supported browser extensions, adware and bloatware. The PC Repair Clinic may list the publisher name inKline Global, Inc. and the users may be suggested that the tool is supposed to help them fix problems with Windows. The PC Repair Clinic has an official site on h[tt]p://www.inklineglobal[.]com/products/pcrepairclinic where the program is said to address system crashes, frequent reboots, DLL errors and unrecognized file type reports.

The 'Performance Comparison Before and After PC Repair Clinic Optimization' section of inklineglobal[.]com/products/pcrepairclinic might suggest that the majority of Windows issues are caused by bad Registry keys — that is not true. System crashes may be caused by bad updates from Microsoft, poorly implemented patches for your applications, hardware and software incompatibility. You should not rely on the PC Repair Clinic to fix problems with Windows and you may want to avoid the tools promoted with 'Your system is heavily damaged by (4) virus!' pop-up windows. Computer security researchers found that the PC Repair Clinic flags updates from Microsoft, Registry entries and user logins saved in the browser as "high risk" factors that affect Windows. The PC Repair Clinic tool may direct users to delete their logins in Google Chrome, Internet Explorer and Mozilla Firefox. PC users may be shown notifications from the PC Repair Clinic every time they reboot their systems. You are likely to experience browser redirects when you click on promotions by the PC Repair Clinic. The PC Repair Clinic software is categorized as a Potentially Unwanted Program (PUP) from inKline Global, Inc. that may use misleading messages to convince users to buy a renewing subscription of $29.95 per month.

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