Threat Database Adware Rush Form Ads

Rush Form Ads

By GoldSparrow in Adware

The Rush Form software may appear in your 'Programs and Features' panel, and you may want to know that it is adware. Adware developers prioritize pay-per-click income over the name of their applications, and that is why the name 'Rush Form' is not something created after a long thinking process. You may have installed the Rush Form adware by handling a free software package with the 'Express' or 'Typical'. Security researchers reveal that the Rush Form adware is known to inhabit the hidden AppData folder and use an executable DLL file to alter the way Google Chrome, Internet Explorer and Mozilla Firefox operate. The Rush Form adware may display advertisements in the form of banners, inline ads, pop-up and pop-under windows. Computer users infected with the Rush Form adware should keep in mind that the ads by Rush Form may not be safe. Browsers affected by the Rush Form adware may have disabled pop-up blocking mechanisms, phishing protection and redirect users to potentially harmful sites. The Rush Form adware may slow down your Web browser and invite you to download software updates to Java and Adobe Flash Player from sites like Newsafeupdatesfree.org and UpdatesJava.com. Security researchers warn users that the sites mentioned before are not associated with the legitimate copies of software by Oracle Technology Network and Adobe Systems Inc. Additionally, the Rush Form adware may record information like your Internet and download history and send it to third-parties for analysis and behavioral marketing. You should decide to use a trusted anti-spyware tool to eliminate the Rush Form adware securely.

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