Any Search Manager
Content:
Any Search Manager by SafeFinder is a strain of Mac malware that changes one’s web browsing preferences without permission, thereby driving traffic to its junk landing page at search.anysearchmanager.com or search.anysearch.net. Its installation usually escapes the user’s attention because the payload comes with bundles consisting of several programs, where only the benign component is in the limelight while the harmful object is deliberately kept backstage. This scheme explains why Mac users are unaware of the attack until the obvious symptoms come to the fore. Speaking of which, the infection operates according to a well-trodden hijacking plan: it adds a new extension called Any Search Manager 1.0 to Safari, Chrome, or Firefox. The specific browser undergoing this influence is the one the victim uses by default. The add-on immediately disables the previously defined custom settings and overrides them with a site of its own. This effect definitely contradicts the developer’s marketing mantra about allowing users to “easily search from the desktop”.
The takeover of the web settings is stubborn enough to prevent the user from reverting to the correct configuration. The search engine, homepage, and new tab page fields are usually grayed out so that it’s impossible to enter anything alternative in a regular way. As a result, the infected Mac user ends up being stuck with search.anysearchmanager.com or its replica search.anysearch.net as their most frequently visited site, although they never opted for this in a straightforward way.
The page is designed as if it were a garden-variety search engine, but it turns out to lack a fundamental feature. When the victim enters a keyword, the dubious service returns search.yahoo.com rather than results of its own. This oddity means that the website endorsed by Any Search Manager is just a gasket between the intercepted Internet traffic and a third-party provider. What’s the point? The criminals behind this fraud most likely rake in profit by forcing unique user hits to ad networks, which occurs inconspicuously when every redirect encounter is underway.
Although this service has an official website (anysearchmanager.com), the app download feature is missing there. This is a common discrepancy with potentially unwanted applications, or PUAs, which would hardly ever lure anyone to install them knowingly. The threat under consideration makes the rounds in a much stealthier way than via regular distribution channels. In most cases, it is installed alongside an Adobe Flash Player update package available on poor-quality software repository sites.
The shady bundle may be promoted through fake Flash Player update alerts popping up on hacked or malicious web pages. These untrustworthy notifications try to dupe users into thinking that they won’t get the most out of their web surfing unless they switch to the latest version of the software. Instead of giving your Internet experience a boost, though, this update additionally pushes Any Search Manager without letting you know. On top of it, the hidden structure of these installers often includes phony system utilities such as MacKeeper that uses scare tactics to fool victims into buying its licensed copy.
Unlike an average Mac app, Any Search Manager extends its own privileges in the host system by creating a new configuration profile behind the victim’s back. One of the goals of this activity is to disable the normal customization routine in the web browser. In other words, the default search and homepage areas under Safari, Chrome, or Firefox settings will be blocked from editing. Therefore, the rogue search.anysearchmanager.com URL appears to be hard-coded in these preferences without any obvious way to change it.
The good news is, ending the malicious process in the Activity Monitor may help you get around this obstruction and uninstall the harmful application. However, Any Search Manager tends to reappear shortly. This happens in scenarios where the device profile associated with the infection continues to be in effect. It runs commands to download and install the virus after it has been removed. Therefore, the cleanup is incomplete unless you get rid of the troublemaking profile under System Preferences. The appropriate steps will be provided further down.
Although this threat manifests itself in the web browser only, it actually leaves a footprint across the system to maintain persistence. The subsection below will help you find and remove all the components of Any Search Manager virus manually. Keep in mind that some of its files are a no-brainer to spot, while a few may be hidden so that the cleanup is harder to complete than in a typical software uninstall situation.
Thankfully, you needn’t reinvent the wheel in terms of invalidating the adverse tweaks caused by the Any Search Manager virus in your browser. A tried-and-true technique is to reset the affected browser to its original defaults. On a side note, Apple has removed the “Reset Safari” button since the release of the Mac native browser’s version 9 back in 2015, so the procedure is now a bit more complex than a one-click experience (see below). Anyway, here’s a simple way to purge the most popular web browsers of the malicious influence:
Symptoms isolated to the browser are the tip of the iceberg. Any Search Manager and its associated malware can gain a foothold in the Mac beyond redirect activity alone. The drawback of manual removal is that there might be hidden leftovers of the threat that will reinstall it after what seems to be a successful cleanup. This isn’t necessarily the case, but you may want to double-check if you are in the clear.
Consider scanning your Mac with Combo Cleaner, an optimization and security app with a decent track record. It’s lightweight, and it can detect all prevalent forms of Mac malware in a snap. Here’s the how-to:
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