This can prevent vital components of the malware to be downloaded, thus lowering the risk for you. I realise everyone's computer is different, but isn't it about time (you've had years now) you either fixed it, or started over w. You issue a fix and ten minutes later, it's dying again.
However, we can still mitigate part of the problem, because as soon as it starts pulling other malicious software from a server that we do know, we will block that transfer. Hello Malwarebytes, For I don't know how long now, web protection has been an issue. That’s our miss and unfortunately the malware is now installed. Number two is let’s say you download malware from a specific server that we failed to detect. So you can actually continue your install without installing any malware. In those cases our IP blocking module detects that connection and blocks it. This is not an uncommon issue, whether it’s adware or toolbars, some free applications make their money this way. Let’s say you download a sketchy piece of software, and once you start the installation process, it starts installing malware as well because they get paid money for every installation that people do. There are two more things I want to add here. So, if you visit a website that was hijacked and has an ‘iframe’ in there trying to pull a malicious executable and get it on your system, Malwarebytes will let the page load but block access to the executable from a malicious server. We have a website blocking module that basically blocks your computer from ever accessing servers that can contain malware.