Remove asianseduction.info Pop Up Ads Caused By Adware

Having difficulties with pop-ups from asianseduction.info? If so, you may have adware installed on your machine. I got the asianseduction.info pop-up tabs in Firefox, but they can show up if you are using Chrome, Internet Explorer, Safari or Opera too.

Here’s how the asianseduction.info pop-up looked like when I got it on my machine when it appeared in a new tab in Firefox:

asianseduction.info pop up

If you also see this on your machine, you presumably have some adware installed on your computer that pops up the asianseduction.info ads. There’s no use contacting the owners of the website you currently were browsing. The ads are not coming from them. I’ll do my best to help you remove the asianseduction.info pop-up in this blog post. This is done by removing the unwanted adware from your machine.

I found the asianseduction.info pop-up on one of the lab machines where I have some adware running. I’ve talked about this in some of the previous blog posts. The adware was installed on purpose, and from time to time I check if anything new has appeared, such as pop-up windows, new tabs in the browsers, injected ads on website that usually don’t show ads, or if some new files have been saved to the hard-drive.

asianseduction.info resolves to 63.219.179.80. The domain is protected by Domains By Proxy LLC.

So, how do you remove the asianseduction.info pop-up ads? On the machine where I got the asianseduction.info ads I had installed. I removed them with FreeFixer and that stopped the asianseduction.info pop-ups and all the other ads I was getting in .

The problem with pop-ups such as this one is that it can be launched by many variants of adware, not just the adware that’s installed on my system. This makes it impossible to say exactly what you need to remove to stop the pop-ups.

To remove the asianseduction.info pop-up ads you need to examine your system for adware or other types of unwanted software and uninstall it. Here’s my suggested removal procedure:

  1. Check what programs you have installed in the Add/Remove programs dialog in the Windows Control Panel. Do you see anything that you don’t remember installing or that was recently installed?
  2. You can also check the add-ons you have in your browsers. Same thing here, do you see something that you don’t remember installing?
  3. If that didn’t help, I’d recommend a scan with FreeFixer to manually track down the adware. FreeFixer is a freeware tool that I’m working on that scans your computer at lots of locations, such as browser add-ons, processes, Windows services, recently modified files, etc. If you want to get additional details about a file in the scan result, you can click the More Info link for that file and a web page will open up with a VirusTotal report which will be very useful to determine if the file is safe or malware:

    FreeFixer More Info link example
    An example of FreeFixer’s “More Info” links. Click for full size.

Did this blog post help you to remove the asianseduction.info pop up ads? Please let me know or how I can improve this blog post.

Thank you!