Remove Agins.live Pop-up Virus — How to Remove?

Agins.live pop-up notifications can show up unexpectedly, covering the material of the site you explored or opening your browser when you don’t wish it to be opened.

Clicking the Agins.live promotion may cause the injection of various malware or unwanted programs. In this guide, you will see the manual of Agins.live popups clearing in a couple of manners, as well as inspecting your PC for other malware presence.

What are Agins.live pop-ups?

Agins.live popups are an effect of adware presence. Adware is a type of malware that presents you the pay-per-view of pay-per-click advertisements, which creates a substantial amount of profit for adware representatives. These promotions might have sometimes shocking information, or have a link to malicious content/website, since adware maintainers have no reason to inspect the goodness of the web content they are going to reveal – their solitary target is cash.

Agins.live push notification

Agins.live push notification.

Pop-up advertising itself is a very good, low-priced and very efficient marketing method1. It permits the seller to attach the buyers’ attention to their site, and the customers to get the dynamic updates on the goods they want to buy. When the customer will receive a pop-up alert that the TV set he wishes to purchase is provided at the online store he/she saw earlier with a 15% price cut, one will undoubtedly use this possibility and get it. Considering the incredibly low price for the popups and their targeting, such an advertising and marketing method is a favorite thing amongst the marketing departments of huge internet retail stores.

Nevertheless, such a profitable strategy could not be missed by virus creators. Ability to show the popup ads forcibly to the victims of malware attack is a great basis for evil-minded manipulations with the popup ads. And Agins.live promotions is among hundreds that are “employed” in this scheme.

Here is a details for the Agins.live
Site Agins.live
Hosting AS14061 DigitalOcean, LLC
United States, Santa Clara
Infection Type Adware, Push notifications, Unwanted Ads, Pop-up Ads
IP Address 147.182.255.121
Symptoms Annoying pop-up ads in the right corner.
Similar behavior Reamsan, Midcopyhave, News
Fix Tool
To remove possible virus infections, try to scan your PC

How have I got the Agins.live virus?

There are a lot of ways of becoming contaminated by the adware that create the Agins.live popups tornado. A lion’s part of this malware cases is after the freeware or cracked programs, that are spread on the peering networks. Free software may also be downloaded from the main website, and the adware is presented as a legitimate bundled program.

There is no need to blame yourself. A lot of individuals regularly work with the unreliable programs from untrusted providers: abandonware, a wide range of apps that are free, and even hacked programs. All of these kinds of programs are dangerous, since it is very easy to build in a Agins.live malware under the cover of part of the license hacking script, or as a component of the self-made algoritm inside of the Windows optimization tool.

People dislike popups

The statistic shows that people dislike popup advertising more than other types of promotions

How can I get rid of Agins.live pop-up advertisements?

The manual of Agins.live adware elimination contains 2 parts. First, we need to eliminate the malware, and then fix the consequences of its action. The removal task is really easy, because it may be executed even with the use of Microsoft Defender – anti-malware tool that is available on all personal computers with Windows 8/10. Nevertheless, as a result of its huge resources usage, along with some problems that can be crucial for some groups of individuals, Defender is often turned off by the users, so its use is likely impossible. Moreover, a variety of trojan viruses have the ability to turn off the embedded antivirus. It is far better to use the separated program that will not have such weakness.

    Gridinsoft Anti-Malware during the scan process
  • Standard scan checks the logical disk where the system files are stored, together with the files of programs you have already installed. The scan lasts up to 6 minutes.
  • GridinSoft Anti-Malware scan results
  • When the scan is over, you may choose the action for each detected virus. For all files of Agins.live malware the default option is “Delete”. Press “Apply” to finish the malware removal.
  • GridinSoft Anti-Malware - After Cleaning

Reset browser settings to default

Manual method of browser reset

To reset Edge, do the following steps :
  1. Open “Settings and more” tab in upper right corner, then find here “Settings” button. In the appeared menu, choose “Reset settings” option :
  2. Reseting the Edge browser
  3. After picking the Reset Settings option, you will see the following menu, stating about the settings which will be reverted to original :
For Mozilla Firefox, do the next actions :
  1. Open Menu tab (three strips in upper right corner) and click the “Help” button. In the appeared menu choose “troubleshooting information” :
  2. The first step to revert Mozilla Firefox
  3. In the next screen, find the “Refresh Firefox” option :
  4. The second step of Firefox restoration
    After choosing this option, you will see the next message :
    The last step for Firefox
If you use Google Chrome
  1. Open Settings tab, find the “Advanced” button. In the extended tab choose the “Reset and clean up” button :
  2. In the appeared list, click on the “Restore settings to their original defaults” :
  3. Finally, you will see the window, where you can see all the settings which will be reset to default :
Opera can be reset in the next way
  1. Open Settings menu by pressing the gear icon in the toolbar (left side of the browser window), then click “Advanced” option, and choose “Browser” button in the drop-down list. Scroll down, to the bottom of the settings menu. Find there “Restore settings to their original defaults” option :

  2. After clicking the “Restore settings…” button, you will see the window, where all settings, which will be reset, are shown :

When the browsers are reset, you need to make sure that your browser will connect the correct DNS while connecting to the site you want. Make a text file titled “hosts” on your desktop, then open it and fill it with the following lines3:

# Copyright (c) 1993-2006 Microsoft Corp.
#
# This is a sample HOSTS file used by Microsoft TCP/IP for Windows.
#
# This file contains the mappings of IP addresses to host names. Each
# entry should be kept on an individual line. The IP address should
# be placed in the first column followed by the corresponding host name.
# The IP address and the host name should be separated by at least one
# space.
#
# Additionally, comments (such as these) may be inserted on individual
# lines or following the machine name denoted by a ‘#’ symbol.
#
# For example:
#
# 102.54.94.97 rhino.acme.com # source server
# 38.25.63.10 x.acme.com # x client host
# localhost name resolution is handle within DNS itself.
# 127.0.0.1 localhost
# ::1 localhost

Find the hosts.txt file in C:/Windows/System32/drivers/etc directory. Rename this file to “hosts.old.txt” (to distinguish it from the new one), and then move the file you created on the desktop to this folder. Remove the hosts.old from this folder. Now you have your hosts file as good as new.

Nevertheless, there is one trouble that makes things a lot more difficult to fix, specifically without the anti-malware software. The majority of adware versions that are utilized to show you the Agins.live pop-up advertisements are adjusting the deep browser settings, disabling an access to the settings tab. So, if you attempt to fix your browser settings after your system was penetrated by pop-up-related malware, your browser will collapse quickly. In certain cases, you will see no crash, however, significant lag spike after pushing the “settings” key. Browser will stop responding for ~ 30 secs, and afterwards it will be back to the normal, up until you attempt to open settings once again.

References

  1. More about pop-up ads on Wikipedia.
  2. Official Microsoft guide for hosts file reset.

About the author

Wilbur Woodham

Technical writer covering malware detections, unwanted programs, and browser-based threats. Wilbur turns research notes into step-by-step guides that Windows users can follow safely.

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