Advice Needed


I know others have discussed this. No matter what exclusion I add to Malwarebytes, the "Website blocked due to riskware" warning pops up. It does allow me onto Audiogon, but starting today it keeps popping up as I am reading different threads, versus previously just once when first coming onto the website. Does someone have the correct "exclusion" to add to Malwarebytes? 

Moderators, I can't be the only one with this problem, can you provide the correct "exclusion"?


Thanks in advance.

George
jetter
FWIW, I use ESET’s well regarded NOD32 anti-virus program (but not either of ESET’s security "suites"), in conjunction with Firefox and Windows 10. I have never seen any such warnings while viewing any pages at Audiogon.

My guess is that the warning you are seeing is being triggered by an ad, although of course I have no way of knowing whether the warning is or is not a false positive. Ads on the site are apparently provided via Google’s ad service, and presumably are not hosted by Audiogon. And different users will see different ads depending in part on what other websites they have previously viewed.

Best regards,
-- Al
Thanks al and new, I am really not worried about "riskware", but just would like its constant malawarebytes message invasion to stop.
@jetter...………………………………

Open Malwarebytes, go to settings, exclusions.  Type in:  ucarecdn.com
and all will be well again.
jetter...If sereo5's suggestion worked for you then congrats. Since your post deals specifically with access to this Audiogon website, I do not wish to proliferate a discussion from the main topic....audio.However, I have used almost every malware blocking program out there. Malwarebytes is among the worst of all. It's really not as effective as you think and can hamper your ability to use the Internet. These malware blocking programs progressively build their own hidden databases and then flag new ones that are unfamiliar.As long as you are running a good anti virus program (I feel stupid for mentioning that) there are many programs, whether free or paid, that will allow you to do periodic scans for malware, tracking cookies, etc. Spybot comes to mind but there are others.Just like running periodic virus scans, you can run a malware scan. But, having a program like Malwarebytes to constantly monitor your computer only hampers performance and isn't really that effective.OK computers gurus.....talk.