Opera autoruns at Windows boot with 4 tabs
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burnout426 Volunteer last edited by
I installed Carbonite and couldn't reproduce. I then uninstalled Opera and couldn't reproduce. I then reinstalled Opera and now I can reproduce. I will investigate in a bit to see if I can figure out what's going on.
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A Former User last edited by
I'm also experiencing the progid error as albertico describes it. It seems to be triggered by and Opera uninstall. I'm hoping that someone here can come up with a fix.
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burnout426 Volunteer last edited by burnout426
It's CarboniteUI.exe that triggers it at least. You can kill it in task manager and then launch Carbonite again to trigger the problem without a restart.
Edit: When I reinstalled, I reinstalled both Opera Stable and Opera Developer. I installed Opera Developer last and Opera Developer's launcher.exe is the one that Carbonite is launching.
launcher.exe gets added to the "HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Explorer\FileExts.Application" list.
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blackbird71 last edited by blackbird71
@muharana said in Opera autoruns at Windows boot with 4 tabs:
@blackbird71 ... To be clear, Opera, in my case, did not "install itself." I installed and then uninstalled it when it did not work well. And when the popups began, I started the aforementioned Microsoft thread, in the hopes that I'd discover what went wrong. ... We just need to know what that component is and how to get it back, if possible.
Understood. My reply was with directed to a poster's assertion that Opera somehow installed itself 'spam-like' or malware-like onto a user's system. The record needed to be set straight on that point. It does appear that there's some kind of interaction between Opera's re-install and Carbonite (as @burnout426 has demonstrated) that needs to be sorted out and fixed.
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burnout426 Volunteer last edited by
I got Opera to stop launching by renaming "HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\ProgID" to "offProgId".
Does that work for anyone else?
The key might reappear with the original name, but that seems to be the culprit so far for me.
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burnout426 Volunteer last edited by burnout426
@burnout426 said in Opera autoruns at Windows boot with 4 tabs:
The key might reappear with the original name, but that seems to be the culprit so far for me.
Yes. Opera Developer wasn't set as the default browser. When I set it as such, the ProgID key reappeared and caused the problem again.
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A Former User last edited by
I've experienced the same problem with the "progid:InternetExplorer.Application" message popping up. Sequence of events:
- Installed Opera (to troubleshoot something for a client)
- Uninstalled Opera
- After uninstall, that progid message appeared on start up. I had to click ok 4 times (would pop up again after each "ok") before it would go away.
- Uninstalled Carbonite (per the Microsoft forum post referred to above) and reinstalled Carbonite.
- "progid" popup message stopped
I'm running Win10 and Carbonite like everyone else. Never had this problem until I (unfortunately) installed Opera
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burnout426 Volunteer last edited by burnout426
@burnout426 said in Opera autoruns at Windows boot with 4 tabs:
Yes. Opera Developer wasn't set as the default browser. When I set it as such, the ProgID key reappeared and caused the problem again.
It also reappears when installing/upgrading Opera.
Also, after deleting the ProgID key, I created a dummy one in its place and then set everything to DENY so that Opera wouldn't add its strings etc. to the key when you set it as the default browser. That worked. However, when I tested installing/upgrading Opera, Opera somehow wrote to the key anyway and messed up the permissions of the key where I could no longer delete the key. Took me a while, but I was able to delete the key again.
Anyway, for users that are or already have uninstalled Opera, deleting "HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\ProgID" should fix the issue. For users that want to keep Opera or reinstall Opera, you'll have to delete the key after every time you set Opera as the default browser or you install/upgrade Opera, (For now at least)
Delete "HKEY_USERS.DEFAULT\Software\Classes\ProgID" too if it's there just for good measure.
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A Former User last edited by
@burnout426 said in Opera autoruns at Windows boot with 4 tabs:
Delete "HKEY_USERS.DEFAULT\Software\Classes\ProgID" too if it's there just for good measure.
Thanks burnout - this fixes the issue for me as well.
I'll have to await Opera to release a new version without this bug before I can continue using opera again. -
A Former User last edited by
@burnout426 Thanks, burnout426! Deleting "HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\ProgID" worked for me too. You're a champ!
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A Former User last edited by
@blackbird71 said in Opera autoruns at Windows boot with 4 tabs:
Things like this don't "just happen", they happen for a reason.
As far as I know, Opera was installed on my computer when I bought it. Of course, if that's true, why did it suddenly begin auto-starting?
There's no malware on my computer. Maybe Opera piggybacks onto something else? I could have overlooked a tiny box that was already checked. Some programs try to sneak onto computers that way. But I hadn't installed anything recently, when this started happening.
I'm going to be very, very careful to avoid Opera in the future, but I'm normally quite careful already. I tend to be paranoid about internet security. So I have no idea what happened in this case.
I'm also hesitant to start screwing around with the registry, given that I know nothing about this stuff. I might just uninstall Carbonite and switch to a different backup service to see if that works. But we'll see. I certainly appreciate the comments here.
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A Former User last edited by
@team5d - Nevermind. That didn't fix it. Uninstalling Opera and uninstalling/reinstalling Carbonite did not get rid of the progid popup. It's still there. Argh!
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burnout426 Volunteer last edited by burnout426
@maryxyz said in Opera autoruns at Windows boot with 4 tabs:
Thanks, burnout426! Deleting "HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\ProgID" worked for me too
Thanks for the confirmation. Here is a simple reg file that one can launch to get rid of the key. All it has in it is:
[-HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\ProgID]
I tested it to make sure it works.
I didn't test, but one could delete the key in a command prompt like this:
REG DELETE "HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\ProgID" /f
One could also set up a startup entry or scheduled task (that runs before Carbonite) to delete the key at startup with that command
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albertico last edited by
@burnout426 You're the best! Deleting this key seems to have done away with the error prompts at startup for me as well! Thanks so much
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A Former User last edited by
@burnout426 Thanks for the additional info, burnout. I'll file that for later reference if needed. You're help is so appreciated!