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  2. Turn Desktop notifications on or off for AOL Mail

    help.aol.com/articles/turn-desktop-notifications...

    Toggle Desktop Notifications on or off . Enable browser notifications in Mac Settings. Click System preferences. Click Notifications & Focus. Make sure that you have the notifications in your system enabled in addition to accepting the prompt within the browser itself and follow the steps to enable notifications for your chosen browser. Chrome ...

  3. Turn pop-ups off or on in your browser - AOL Help

    help.aol.com/articles/disable-or-enable-pop-ups...

    • Manage pop-ups in Safari • Manage pop-ups in Firefox • Manage pop-ups in Chrome. While Internet Explorer may still work with some AOL products, it's no longer supported by Microsoft and can't be updated. Because of this, we recommend you download a supported browser for a more reliable and secure experience.

  4. Overview of the updated AOL app experience for iOS

    help.aol.com/articles/overview-of-the-updated...

    Delete an email. To delete an email in the app, there are a few options. From the message list, swipe to the left on a message to delete. Tap on a message to open it and tap the trash can in the lower left. Delete multiple messages simultaneously. Tap the icon to the left of the sender's name on each message to delete.

  5. Notification Center - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Notification_Center

    All previous notifications are collated into the Notification Center panel, which can be displayed in iOS by dragging down from the status bar, and in macOS by clicking on the notification center icon to the very right on the menu bar at the top of the screen (or using track-pad gestures, swiping from right to left).

  6. macOS malware - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MacOS_malware

    macOS malware includes viruses, trojan horses, worms and other types of malware that affect macOS, Apple's current operating system for Macintosh computers. macOS (previously Mac OS X and OS X) is said to rarely suffer malware or virus attacks, [1] and has been considered less vulnerable than Windows. [2]

  7. Man-in-the-browser - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Man-in-the-browser

    Man-in-the-browser (MITB, MitB, MIB, MiB), a form of Internet threat related to man-in-the-middle (MITM), is a proxy Trojan horse [1] that infects a web browser by taking advantage of vulnerabilities in browser security to modify web pages, modify transaction content or insert additional transactions, all in a covert fashion invisible to both the user and host web application.