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    How to disable Opera start-up

    Opera for Windows
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    • A Former User
      A Former User last edited by

      @joshl
      I can confirm that Autoruns 13.51 works fine on XP.
      🆙

      @freedom3401
      I suspect that the "www.go-" link you're seeing very briefly is a "http://go.microsoft.com...." link.
      They are usually used to redirect to other Microsoft pages.
      🙂

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      • freedom3401
        freedom3401 last edited by

        I wish I could tell you guys what the problem is but it hasn't been happening since. Hopefully it stays that way. The only thing I can think of which MIGHT have resolved the issue is on the settings in Opera which lets you decide the 'start-up options' and I chose 'previous page' which was essentially nothing rather than the other two.

        If I have time I'll test it and let you guys know but otherwise thanks for the help!

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        • freedom3401
          freedom3401 last edited by

          Ok I did jinx myself. And I saw the link.

          go.microsoft.com/fwlink

          Does it look suspicious to anyone? Or do I just have to live with it?

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          • A Former User
            A Former User last edited by

            No, that's fine. As I said earlier, it's just a forwarding link, although it would normally have something else after the "fwlink".
            If you look at your Windows event logs, they all contain a similar link to click on to get further information, e.g. http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/events.asp.
            🙂

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            • blackbird71
              blackbird71 last edited by

              The go.microsoft.com/fwlink you noted is a Microsoft 'internal redirect' link that, by itself, merely takes one to the www.microsoft.com webpage. Such a link, as @davehawley notes, is normally accompanied with a LinkID number (such as http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/p/?LinkID=313611), which will take one to a specific-purposed MS webpage. The MSN 'start page' for IE, for example, is: http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkID=255141, and is etched into the registry. A question exists whether there is more to the link than just what you provided?

              The exact link you did provide isn't suspicious by itself. However, the triggering process is not normal for a non-IE browser on Windows 7 or 8.1, and indicates something abnormal has occurred. There are a variety of possible causes, though at this point, there's not enough information details to conclude exactly what. Possibilities: registry corruption, Microsoft update gone haywire, Microsoft Windows 10 "push" update gone haywire, or a Windows internal attempt to bring up a certain Microsoft information/alert page gone haywire.

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              • sgunhouse
                sgunhouse Moderator Volunteer last edited by

                Hard to consider any legit Microsoft site as dangerous, other than them trying to upgrade you to 10 if you don't want it. That doesn't mean you "just have to live with it", but you may be further ahead searching Google to see how to disable it.

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                • A Former User
                  A Former User last edited by
                    I'd start by downloading a copy of Sysinternal's Autoruns-for-Windows (and now a Microsoft product) at: https://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/sysinternals/bb963902.aspx  It's a safe, standalone product that doesn't need installation, being run directly from its exe file, though it does need admin privileges.
                  
                  Does it work on XP?
                  

                  I believe so. I know that 12.03 did, and the current 13.51 is shown as being XP compatible on most of the freeware sites (in fact, it shows as Win2000 compatible on many of them). The MS sites don't list XP compatibility any more, regardless of whether a program has it because - well, because that's how MS does things regarding their OS versions after end-of-support. Given that the software doesn't actually 'install' but instead runs from the executable, it should be easy enough to try it out to make sure.

                  Well, it says
                  Download Autoruns and Autorunsc - is it right? Like some two things there? It should be? 😕

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                  • A Former User
                    A Former User last edited by

                    There are two executables in the zip file that you download.
                    Autoruns.exe is the Windows GUI version, which is what you want.
                    Autorunsc.exe is a command line version, which you can use in a command prompt.
                    🙂

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                    • A Former User
                      A Former User last edited by

                      What's the second one for? I didn't get it.

                      Sorry for hijacking the thread! 😃 :troll:

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                      • leocg
                        leocg Moderator Volunteer last edited by

                        What's the second one for? I didn't get it.

                        For the same it seems but it runs on command line (like command prompt), without a graphic interface.

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