Topdomainblog Ads Removal Guide — How to Fix It?

Topdomainblog pop-up notifications appear out of the blue, bothering and annoying you. Nonetheless, they are way more than simple pop-ups – their nature is clearly malicious, and they may install other malicious stuff to your system. In this article, I will show you the guide how to remove Topdomainblog push notifications and explain how to avoid them in the future.

Any time you interact with Topdomainblog pop-ups will be useless at best. At worst, the pages it can show you can introduce malware to your system. These push notifications can also promote fake shopping sites which will take your money and payment info. The latter generally ends up with losing all the money you have on the exposed card.

What are Topdomainblog push notifications?

As the pop-up definition goes, these are short and small advertisements that attract your attention to a product they promote. But the difference between regular pop-up notifications and Topdomainblog notifications is the malignant origins of the latter. Common pop-up advertisements are offered for you to enable on different sites with a benevolent purpose – keep you aware about the latest publications, discounts and so on. It is an effective approach to help your site to keep visitors and help the interested visitors to have the best deal.

Brief summary of the Topdomainblog.com pop-ups:
Name Topdomainblog.com
Hosting AS13335 Cloudflare, Inc.
United States, San Francisco
IP Address 172.67.150.127
Malware type Adware1
Effect Unwanted pop-up advertisements
Hazard level Medium
Malware source Apps from third-party websites, ads on dubious websites
Similar behavior Crystalcrafter, Searchesmia, Flamebeard
Removal method
To remove possible virus infections, try to scan your PC

Topdomainblog pop-up advertisements, as opposed, have a deal with untrustworthy websites. You will generally see the offer to enable them following the redirection from another page. Redirects are OK unless it throws you to such a questionable place. In this case, turning on push notifications is offered under the guise of the anti-bot filtering. Alternatively, the websites can refuse to show you the contents unless you enable these pop-up advertisements. These requirements should be the red flag, as websites commonly feature a different anti-bot mechanism. Seeing this demand should be the reason to skip the site doubtlessly. In some cases, even after clicking “Allow”, you will not get to the website – the only page it has is a landing page with the offer to turn on the pop-up advertisements.

Topdomainblog push notification

Topdomainblog push notification.

How does it work?

The majority of browsers support turning on push notifications from sites. Sites, on the other hand, may send notifications with the content they like. It can be a promotion of the product or a page published on this website, or a promotion of the page of their partner. As a result, you can see the push notification from site X, but opening it will throw you to site Y – because a link to the latter was added.

Cyber burglars bear on this feature in their approach to gain money using illegal advertising. They trick victims into allowing the pop-ups, and after that just spread numerous banners of other crooks they have a deal with. As you may suppose, no legit companies will have a deal with fraudsters. All the Topdomainblog popups you can see lead to other untrustworthy sites. At some point, the same victim can get into a trap of multiple pop-up spamming web pages, and its web browser will turn into a complete mess.

The ads these rascals show are paid under the pay-per-view model. It commonly provides a negligible commission for one view, but when you have a huge number of users and show them hundreds of ads every day – that is a way bigger sum. Despite most of such banners giving no result at all, it can still give all the participants a lot of profit.

Are Topdomainblog pop-up advertisements dangerous?

Yes, they are. At the surface, they can look safe – just a blinking pop-up that appears a couple times in an hour. However, the things this window promotes differ sharply from what you used to see in pop-up ads. Topdomainblog.com web page is ruled by crooks, who intendedly throw tons of irrelevant ads in pop-ups. They also never follow any common sense and can make sporadic pop-up notifications into a storm of banners. For weak systems, that may be enough to cause performance issues. But that is not all problems these pop-up ads carry.

Why people dislike popups

As with any other thing related to illegal advertising, Topdomainblog push notifications don’t have legit deals to offer. Even though crooks make the banners looking similar to ones from well-known retailers, the web page these ads will throw you to are completely different. And these pages may offer you to turn on other pop-ups, install a “useful” program, or pay for a thing at a big discount and never receive it. Let’s leave aside the cases when pop-up advertisements promote phishing pages or straightforward malware. There’s no way these pages will bring you any good, thus interacting with them is a very bad idea. For the same reason, Topdomainblog push notifications are not recommended to click on either, and the best solution is to disable them as soon as possible.

How to remove Topdomainblog pop-ups?

First of all, you should reset your browser settings. It is possible to accomplish in both manual and automatic manner. The former, obviously, takes more time to complete and can be somewhat complicated if you have never done that. Automated supposes the use of anti-malware programs that can reset all browser settings at once.

Reset your browsers manually

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 ensure that your browser will connect the right DNS while connecting to the website you need. Create a text file titled “hosts” on your pc’s desktop, then open it and fill it with the following lines2:


# 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.

Scan your system for possible viruses

Once the scan is complete, you will see the detections or a notification about a clean system. Proceed with pressing the Clean Up button (or OK when nothing is detected).

References

  1. 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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