

In the original version of this column I tried to stick up for IObit, which is currently at odds with Malwarebytes over the fact that AdwCleaner flags up its additional folders. IObit hadn’t forcibly installed Advanced SystemCare, but it was laying the ground for it, and that’s not acceptable. Malwarebytes AdwCleaner found an Advanced SystemCare folder in my AppData directory. I managed to install Smart Defrag without the Yahoo-powered Chromium and Search Manager PUPs, but I’d not got away junk-free. The first box (‘Install Search Manager extension’) sounds dodgy, but the second (‘I agree to install the above’) sounds important enough to fool many users into waving a browser hijacker into their hard drives.

Gloomy with disappointment (and disgruntlement, since it meant I had to rewrite this page), I unticked the offending boxes.
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IObit Smart Defrag bundles Yahoo search junk, but it wasn’t there yesterday And wait, what have we here? Pre-ticked boxes for the Chromium browser and a Yahoo search toolbar (see screenshot)? Oh, IObit. Then Friday dawned and I downloaded the installer again, intending to take a few screenshots. OK, so it contained a triple whammy of PUPs – IObit Advanced SystemCare (an entirely separate program from Smart Defrag), password manager Dashlane, and an ebook – but none was pre-ticked, so they were easy to skip. It was positively polite compared with the trail of Yahoo-spewing, browser hijacking horrors I’ve featured lately. Last Thursday afternoon, I ran Smart Defrag’s installer to see what lurked within. But like a kid who’s easily led astray, Smart Defrag has a habit of bringing unwanted friends home – and these friends change depending on the day of the week. It can help to make your PC run faster and more smoothly, and it’s broadly well-behaved. IObit’s free defragging tool Smart Defrag is not a bad program.
