How to Remove Some-othertag.cc Virus

Home ยป Browser Hijacker ยป How to Remove Some-othertag.cc Virus

If you keep getting strange blank pop-ups and notifications in your browser (or even on your desktop when the browser is closed) that warn you about infections, expired licenses, or urgent system issues, donโ€™t assume the worst. It’s far more likely that you are dealing with a hijacker like Some-othertag.cc that’s simply set your browser to flood you with misleading messages to profit off your clicks and potential purchases.

This and other hijackers like Hosting-control.cc and Holiday-forever.cc abuse notification permissions to bombard users with misleading alerts and links to questionable sites. These messages often look official, borrowing names and logos from well-known security brands, but they are always clickbait for ad revenue or for funneling users toward scams.

The usual way Some-othertag.cc sneaks in is after a user unknowingly approves a prompt or installs bundled software. It then quietly embeds itself into the browser and starts its spam campaign.

This is definitely not the most harmful thing you can get on your PC, but, as we said, it can send you to scams or expose you to more dangerous malware. That’s why you should still remove it, and the guide below and the attached professional removal tool – SpyHunter 5 – will help you do exactly that.

Removing Some-othertag.cc: Step-by-Step Guide

Go through the steps in order and note what you disable or delete so you can pinpoint what actually changed. This guided cleanup targets Some-othertag.cc, reduces recurring pop-ups, and puts typical defaults back in place – like your search provider, startup pages, and site permissions – without wiping settings you still rely on day to day.

Fast Checklist to Remove Some-othertag.cc

15 mins
    Fast Checklist to Remove Some-othertag.cc1

  1. 1
    1.1
    Open your browserโ€™s Extensions page and look for add-ons tied to Some-othertag.cc or anything you never installed yourself.
  2. 2
    1.2
    Uninstall anything you didnโ€™t choose. If an extensionโ€™s name, publisher, or permissions look wrong, remove it.
  3. 3
    1.3
    Next, open Privacy and Security settings and review Site Permissions. This controls which sites can send notifications or trigger pop-ups, and hijackers often rely on those approvals.
  4. 4
    1.4
    Remove permission for any sites you donโ€™t know. After cleaning the list, restart your computer and open the browser again.

In some cases, that quick sweep stops the pop-ups and puts preferences back to normal. If redirects continue, changes reappear after restart, or you still see โ€œManaged by your organization,โ€ assume Some-othertag.cc set policies and continue with the deeper cleanup below.

SUMMARY:

Threat name Some-othertag.cc
Category Browser Hijacker
Scanner
Complete Some-othertag.cc Virus Removal video

How to Remove the Some-othertag.cc Browser Hijacker on Windows

When a browser shows โ€œManaged by your organization,โ€ a Windows policy is enforcing settings behind the scenes, so a basic reset may not remove the restriction. The steps below help you identify and delete the exact entries that reapply changes after you fix them. Move carefully, verify each edit, and write down what you change before restarting, especially with Some-othertag.cc in the mix.

managed by your organization
The โ€œManaged by your organizationโ€ notice usually appears when a policy is controlling key browser settings.

1. Find Some-othertag.cc Policy Entries

15 mins
    Find Some-othertag.cc Policy Entries1

  1. 1
    1.1
    chrome policies
    To see whether Some-othertag.cc added policy rules, type chrome://policy in Chromeโ€™s address bar. In another Chromium-based browser, swap โ€œchromeโ€ for that browserโ€™s name.
  2. 2
    1.2
    A page listing active policies will appear. Pay attention to entries with random strings or odd letter patterns in the Value column. Save those values because you will search for them later.
  3. 3
    1.3
    Go back to the Extensions page for more clues. Turn on Developer Mode, copy the IDs for anything suspicious, and keep them alongside the policy values you saved.
  4. 4
    1.4
    If the Extensions page wonโ€™t open, remove extensions manually instead. Open File Explorer and go to:
    C:\Users[Your Username]\AppData\Local\Google\Chrome\User Data\Default\Extensions
  5. 5
    1.5
    chrome extensions folders
    Delete everything inside this folder to wipe all installed extensions, including ones that return after removal. This helps remove leftover pieces that keep forcing unwanted settings.

  6. 6
    1.6
    browser extensions folders
    Other browsers keep extensions in comparable folders:
  7. 7
    1.7
    After you finish, return to your browserโ€™s Extensions Manager page.

Clear Some-othertag.cc Policy Locks

Some of these controls are stored in the Windows Registry, and careless edits can cause issues for Windows or installed applications. Stick to entries that clearly match the values you recorded and avoid broad deletions that touch unrelated software. This step removes the policy hooks that survive a browser reset, which is one reason Some-othertag.cc can persist after basic cleanup.

1. Remove Some-othertag.cc Registry Policies

15 mins
    Remove Some-othertag.cc Registry Policies1

  1. 1
    1.1
    To delete Some-othertag.cc policy entries, open the Registry Editor by typing regedit in the Start Menu and pressing Enter.
  2. 2
    1.2
    In the editor, use Edit > Find to look for the suspicious values you noted earlier. Delete matching entries carefully, then search again until no results remain. That repetition matters – a leftover value can restore the policy.
  3. 3
    1.3
    regedit permissions 2
    If a key refuses to delete, adjust its permissions first. Right-click the key, choose Permissions > Advanced > Change, then grant access to โ€œeveryone.โ€
  4. 4
    1.4
    regedit permissions 3
    Back in the previous window, tick both “Replace…” options, then select Apply and OK.

That change should give you the access needed to delete the stubborn registry key.

Other Options for Removing Some-othertag.cc Policies

3. Additional Ways to Clear Some-othertag.cc Policies

15 mins
    Additional Ways to Clear Some-othertag.cc Policies1

  1. 1
    3.1
    local group policy administrative templates
    If Some-othertag.cc policies keep reappearing, open the Group Policy Editor, a built-in tool for managing system policies. Search your Start Menu for โ€œedit group policyโ€ to launch it, then go to Administrative Templates.
  2. 2
    3.2
    delete local group policies
    Right-click Administrative Templates and choose Add/Remove Templates. In the next window, remove any templates listed there.
  3. 3
    3.3
    Chrome users can also use Chrome Policy Remover. Get it from the linked page.
  4. 4
    3.4
    After it downloads, run it as administrator. If Windows warns you, choose More Info > Run Anyway, then let it finish.

Remove Some-othertag.cc From Chrome, Edge, and Other Browsers

Browser profiles, sign-ins, and sync can bring back modified preferences after you switch profiles or log back in, even if the issue seemed gone. Review defaults and permissions in every profile you actively use so changes donโ€™t return after a restart. Doing that per browser helps keep startup pages, search settings, and permissions stable once Some-othertag.cc is removed.

4. Remove Some-othertag.cc From the Browser

15 mins
    Remove Some-othertag.cc From the Browser1

  1. 1
    4.1
    First, uninstall any extensions tied to Some-othertag.cc from your browser. At this stage, the removal option should be available.
  2. 2
    4.2
    delete browser data chrome
    Next, clear your browsing data. Cookies and cached files can preserve traces of the unwanted behavior. When clearing data, select the โ€œAll Timeโ€ range so nothing is left behind.
  3. 3
    4.3
    chrome site permissions
    After that, open Privacy and Security and review Site Permissions. Confirm that no unknown sites still have permission for notifications or redirects.
  4. 4
    4.4
    chrome search engine
    Also check your search engine settings. If an unfamiliar provider is selected, switch back to a standard option like Google or Bing.
  5. 5
    4.5
    Finally, review the On Startup and Appearance tabs for unknown URLs and remove them. When youโ€™re finished, the browser should open normally again.