I had to tackle result5.google last August, and what I thought at first was a virus was actually a re-direct to Eastern Europe. One of my friends was having problems searching, as his results were constantly being re-directed to advertising pages. He was running a small three computer network in his home with a Linksys wireless router.
Trying to access or download any type of anti-virus program was fruitless and scans with Microsoft Security Essentials and StopZilla turned up other viruses, but didn’t kill off result5.google. Neither did Malwarebytes.
Searches on Bing and Google returned plenty of posts on how to eliminate this problem, but only one helped – and that was to log onto the router, correct the DNS and change the password, then empty his computers’ history, temp pages and cookies. Seems his router’s DNS had been changed to 213.109.67.169 and 213.109.73.170, which a traceroute revealed pointed to Eastern Europe. When he installed his network, he neglected to change the router’s password from the vendor’s default, leaving himself open to exploits.
Typically, routers are marked with their serial numbers and MAC addresses, and from there you can search the vendors online support pages to determine its IP and how to log on to the router to change its password and settings.
I hope this helps anyone out there who is experiencing this problem.
Trying to access or download any type of anti-virus program was fruitless and scans with Microsoft Security Essentials and StopZilla turned up other viruses, but didn’t kill off result5.google. Neither did Malwarebytes.
Searches on Bing and Google returned plenty of posts on how to eliminate this problem, but only one helped – and that was to log onto the router, correct the DNS and change the password, then empty his computers’ history, temp pages and cookies. Seems his router’s DNS had been changed to 213.109.67.169 and 213.109.73.170, which a traceroute revealed pointed to Eastern Europe. When he installed his network, he neglected to change the router’s password from the vendor’s default, leaving himself open to exploits.
Typically, routers are marked with their serial numbers and MAC addresses, and from there you can search the vendors online support pages to determine its IP and how to log on to the router to change its password and settings.
I hope this helps anyone out there who is experiencing this problem.