Pretraži podršku

Izbjegni prevare podrške. Nikad te nećemo tražiti da nas nazoveš, da nam pošalješ telefonski broj ili da podijeliš osobne podatke. Prijavi sumnjive radnje pomoću opcije „Prijavi zlouporabu”.

Saznaj više

is firefox-pat.js which is: JavaScript File from: https://iliximodels16.com a legitimate firefox patch? Also, Yahoo hanging up & freezing.

  • 1 odgovor
  • 3 imaju ovaj problem
  • 1 prikaz
  • Posljednji odgovor od cor-el

more options

What looks like Firefox orange logo pops up with the text: Opening firefox-patch.js firefox-patch.js which is: JavaScript File (8.3 KB) from: https://iliximodels16.com Would like to save this file? Is this a legitimate patch? I am having problems with Yahoo on Firefox hanging up and saying: firefox - yahoo (not responding) My firefox version is 55.03 My operating system is Windows 10 Will reloading firefox solve my problems?

What looks like Firefox orange logo pops up with the text: Opening firefox-patch.js firefox-patch.js which is: JavaScript File (8.3 KB) from: https://iliximodels16.com Would like to save this file? Is this a legitimate patch? I am having problems with Yahoo on Firefox hanging up and saying: firefox - yahoo (not responding) My firefox version is 55.03 My operating system is Windows 10 Will reloading firefox solve my problems?

Izabrano rješenje

No. That isn't a legal update.

If you get a pop-up message asking to update Firefox or plugins or scanning for malware then such a message is likely a scam and you should NEVER respond to such an alert to avoid getting infected with malware.

  • only update Firefox via "Help -> About" or by downloading and installing Firefox from the Mozilla server and never via a pop-up or link on a web page.
  • plugins should only be updated via the plugin itself or by visiting the home page of the plugin.

See also:

Pročitaj ovaj odgovor u kontekstu 👍 3

Svi odgovori (1)

more options

Odabrano rješenje

No. That isn't a legal update.

If you get a pop-up message asking to update Firefox or plugins or scanning for malware then such a message is likely a scam and you should NEVER respond to such an alert to avoid getting infected with malware.

  • only update Firefox via "Help -> About" or by downloading and installing Firefox from the Mozilla server and never via a pop-up or link on a web page.
  • plugins should only be updated via the plugin itself or by visiting the home page of the plugin.

See also: