She knew the cursor was trapped inside the browser window. On a Mac, she held Command + Q . On Windows, Ctrl + Shift + Esc to bring up Task Manager—but her mouse was fake-locked. So she tried Alt + F4 repeatedly. Nothing. Then she remembered: the nuclear option.
The afternoon sun slanted through the blinds as Sarah, a graphic designer working from home, clicked a link in what she thought was an email from a client. Instantly, her screen flickered. A deep, robotic voice boomed from her speakers: how to get rid of scam pop ups
When she rebooted, she immediately pulled the Ethernet cable and turned off Wi-Fi (Settings > Network > Off). Scam pop-ups often reload from a cached page or a malicious redirect—no internet, no reload. She knew the cursor was trapped inside the browser window
She let her hand hover, then pulled it back. The scammer’s goal was fear—get her to dial that number so they could charge $400 to “fix” nothing or install real malware. So she tried Alt + F4 repeatedly
She held down the physical on her laptop for a full 10 seconds. The screen went black. Silence. The scam pop-up was gone.
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