How to remove BetBlocker











up vote
0
down vote

favorite












I've installed BetBlocker but have noticed that, although it works as intended, it works a little too much for a lot of sites I use throughout the day. Namely Youtube, Facebook and anything else that BetBlocker thinks might try to show me any kind of gambling advertisement (really annoying).



I'm trying to remove this software so I can replace it with another that won't do this. However this software is now claiming to be locked in place for 5 years.



I can't find any package relating to "BetBlocker", nor can I see it on the startup applications.



It seems that the 'history' on the Ubuntu Software Centre isn't present for the installation of BetBlocker either.



Not really sure where I should be looking and I need a wizard.



I installed the software by downloading the .deb file provided and installed via the Ubuntu Software Centre.



Ubuntu 16.04 LTS










share|improve this question
























  • Added @user535733
    – Jack hardcastle
    Dec 2 at 1:11















up vote
0
down vote

favorite












I've installed BetBlocker but have noticed that, although it works as intended, it works a little too much for a lot of sites I use throughout the day. Namely Youtube, Facebook and anything else that BetBlocker thinks might try to show me any kind of gambling advertisement (really annoying).



I'm trying to remove this software so I can replace it with another that won't do this. However this software is now claiming to be locked in place for 5 years.



I can't find any package relating to "BetBlocker", nor can I see it on the startup applications.



It seems that the 'history' on the Ubuntu Software Centre isn't present for the installation of BetBlocker either.



Not really sure where I should be looking and I need a wizard.



I installed the software by downloading the .deb file provided and installed via the Ubuntu Software Centre.



Ubuntu 16.04 LTS










share|improve this question
























  • Added @user535733
    – Jack hardcastle
    Dec 2 at 1:11













up vote
0
down vote

favorite









up vote
0
down vote

favorite











I've installed BetBlocker but have noticed that, although it works as intended, it works a little too much for a lot of sites I use throughout the day. Namely Youtube, Facebook and anything else that BetBlocker thinks might try to show me any kind of gambling advertisement (really annoying).



I'm trying to remove this software so I can replace it with another that won't do this. However this software is now claiming to be locked in place for 5 years.



I can't find any package relating to "BetBlocker", nor can I see it on the startup applications.



It seems that the 'history' on the Ubuntu Software Centre isn't present for the installation of BetBlocker either.



Not really sure where I should be looking and I need a wizard.



I installed the software by downloading the .deb file provided and installed via the Ubuntu Software Centre.



Ubuntu 16.04 LTS










share|improve this question















I've installed BetBlocker but have noticed that, although it works as intended, it works a little too much for a lot of sites I use throughout the day. Namely Youtube, Facebook and anything else that BetBlocker thinks might try to show me any kind of gambling advertisement (really annoying).



I'm trying to remove this software so I can replace it with another that won't do this. However this software is now claiming to be locked in place for 5 years.



I can't find any package relating to "BetBlocker", nor can I see it on the startup applications.



It seems that the 'history' on the Ubuntu Software Centre isn't present for the installation of BetBlocker either.



Not really sure where I should be looking and I need a wizard.



I installed the software by downloading the .deb file provided and installed via the Ubuntu Software Centre.



Ubuntu 16.04 LTS







software-installation security






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Dec 2 at 1:10

























asked Dec 2 at 1:02









Jack hardcastle

1136




1136












  • Added @user535733
    – Jack hardcastle
    Dec 2 at 1:11


















  • Added @user535733
    – Jack hardcastle
    Dec 2 at 1:11
















Added @user535733
– Jack hardcastle
Dec 2 at 1:11




Added @user535733
– Jack hardcastle
Dec 2 at 1:11










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
1
down vote



accepted










According to betblocker.org:




Please remember that once the tool is activated you cannot remove the restrictions until your selected restriction length has expired.




Only they can tell you what that means.



Instead of circumventing the software, have you considered if there is an option to make your Facebook or YouTube interactions less impeded? Maybe you can provide feedback by contacting betblocker and see if they can work on helping you, and others, in similar situations.



In the meantime, you can investigate which packages you do have installed (sudo apt list --installed or sudo dpkg -l). You can use grep to filter the output. grep is CaSe SeNsItIvE by default.



Examples:




  1. sudo dpkg -l | grep bet

  2. sudo dpkg -l | grep Bet


Once you find the name of the package, it can be removed with apt, or dpkg:




  • sudo apt remove NAME

  • sudo dpkg -r NAME


If you cannot find any packages, you can look through the list, without using grep, and see if you find any suspicious packages. Don't go removing random packages, but you may see something glaring. Double-check before you remove anything, and if you do, back everything up.





If you have the original package (.deb), you can use dpkg-deb to inspect the package file, which contains data such as the name, and files that it installs. I downloaded the latest, so it could be different:



$ dpkg-deb -f /tmp/bet-blocker_1.0.0_amd64.deb 
Package: bet-blocker
Version: 1.0.0
License: SEE LICENSE IN LICENSE.md
Vendor: Komshita <komshita@gmail.com>
Architecture: amd64
Maintainer: Komshita <komshita@gmail.com>
Installed-Size: 269983
Depends: gconf2, gconf-service, libnotify4, libappindicator1, libxtst6, libnss3, libxss1
Section: default
Priority: extra
Homepage: http://bet-blocker.com
Description: BetBlocker
Bet Blocker, blocks unwanted websites

$ sudo dpkg -r bet-blocker


As noted, you'll need to make adjustments to your /etc/hosts in addition to removing the package.






share|improve this answer



















  • 1




    I found this very helpful and I'm happy to accept this as the answer. I've provided my own answer because there are some extra, annoying things that BetBlocker does which I found pretty intrusive, to say the least. Not ideal. I found the segment regarding dpkg-deb interesting, I didn't know that. I was struggling to find the package name as it seemed to be trying to hide that information from me (or more likely I just didn't know where to look!).
    – Jack hardcastle
    Dec 2 at 1:28




















up vote
1
down vote













Going to answer my own question. I think I've fixed it doing the following:



Using the Synapsis package manager, I was able to find the package and mark it for removal. I then updated my packages and saw the package was removed. (Note that the package / software wasn't showing up in the Ubuntu Software Centre, nor was it listed as a package under the expected name of sudo apt-get remove betblocker, the actual name for this package was bet-blocker, I had assumed betblocker as that was the name of the software on the software launcher). Synapsis was the only manager I was able to see this package under.



With the package removed, the websites were still blocked. This is due to the software editing the /etc/hosts/ file, annoyingly they removed all of my existing hosts while doing this (so I now have to set up all of my host configuration again). You'll want to remove the mass of clutter they've placed into your /etc/hosts and re-add your own hosts.



More annoyingly, they also removed the localhost configuration from the hosts file which meant I was unable to sudo (which is required to edit the hosts file), if this is the case there are other question / answers on this forum as to how to do that.



Once the /etc/hosts file has been restored you'll need to restart your PC for those settings to take effect.






share|improve this answer























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    2 Answers
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    active

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    2 Answers
    2






    active

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    active

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    active

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    up vote
    1
    down vote



    accepted










    According to betblocker.org:




    Please remember that once the tool is activated you cannot remove the restrictions until your selected restriction length has expired.




    Only they can tell you what that means.



    Instead of circumventing the software, have you considered if there is an option to make your Facebook or YouTube interactions less impeded? Maybe you can provide feedback by contacting betblocker and see if they can work on helping you, and others, in similar situations.



    In the meantime, you can investigate which packages you do have installed (sudo apt list --installed or sudo dpkg -l). You can use grep to filter the output. grep is CaSe SeNsItIvE by default.



    Examples:




    1. sudo dpkg -l | grep bet

    2. sudo dpkg -l | grep Bet


    Once you find the name of the package, it can be removed with apt, or dpkg:




    • sudo apt remove NAME

    • sudo dpkg -r NAME


    If you cannot find any packages, you can look through the list, without using grep, and see if you find any suspicious packages. Don't go removing random packages, but you may see something glaring. Double-check before you remove anything, and if you do, back everything up.





    If you have the original package (.deb), you can use dpkg-deb to inspect the package file, which contains data such as the name, and files that it installs. I downloaded the latest, so it could be different:



    $ dpkg-deb -f /tmp/bet-blocker_1.0.0_amd64.deb 
    Package: bet-blocker
    Version: 1.0.0
    License: SEE LICENSE IN LICENSE.md
    Vendor: Komshita <komshita@gmail.com>
    Architecture: amd64
    Maintainer: Komshita <komshita@gmail.com>
    Installed-Size: 269983
    Depends: gconf2, gconf-service, libnotify4, libappindicator1, libxtst6, libnss3, libxss1
    Section: default
    Priority: extra
    Homepage: http://bet-blocker.com
    Description: BetBlocker
    Bet Blocker, blocks unwanted websites

    $ sudo dpkg -r bet-blocker


    As noted, you'll need to make adjustments to your /etc/hosts in addition to removing the package.






    share|improve this answer



















    • 1




      I found this very helpful and I'm happy to accept this as the answer. I've provided my own answer because there are some extra, annoying things that BetBlocker does which I found pretty intrusive, to say the least. Not ideal. I found the segment regarding dpkg-deb interesting, I didn't know that. I was struggling to find the package name as it seemed to be trying to hide that information from me (or more likely I just didn't know where to look!).
      – Jack hardcastle
      Dec 2 at 1:28

















    up vote
    1
    down vote



    accepted










    According to betblocker.org:




    Please remember that once the tool is activated you cannot remove the restrictions until your selected restriction length has expired.




    Only they can tell you what that means.



    Instead of circumventing the software, have you considered if there is an option to make your Facebook or YouTube interactions less impeded? Maybe you can provide feedback by contacting betblocker and see if they can work on helping you, and others, in similar situations.



    In the meantime, you can investigate which packages you do have installed (sudo apt list --installed or sudo dpkg -l). You can use grep to filter the output. grep is CaSe SeNsItIvE by default.



    Examples:




    1. sudo dpkg -l | grep bet

    2. sudo dpkg -l | grep Bet


    Once you find the name of the package, it can be removed with apt, or dpkg:




    • sudo apt remove NAME

    • sudo dpkg -r NAME


    If you cannot find any packages, you can look through the list, without using grep, and see if you find any suspicious packages. Don't go removing random packages, but you may see something glaring. Double-check before you remove anything, and if you do, back everything up.





    If you have the original package (.deb), you can use dpkg-deb to inspect the package file, which contains data such as the name, and files that it installs. I downloaded the latest, so it could be different:



    $ dpkg-deb -f /tmp/bet-blocker_1.0.0_amd64.deb 
    Package: bet-blocker
    Version: 1.0.0
    License: SEE LICENSE IN LICENSE.md
    Vendor: Komshita <komshita@gmail.com>
    Architecture: amd64
    Maintainer: Komshita <komshita@gmail.com>
    Installed-Size: 269983
    Depends: gconf2, gconf-service, libnotify4, libappindicator1, libxtst6, libnss3, libxss1
    Section: default
    Priority: extra
    Homepage: http://bet-blocker.com
    Description: BetBlocker
    Bet Blocker, blocks unwanted websites

    $ sudo dpkg -r bet-blocker


    As noted, you'll need to make adjustments to your /etc/hosts in addition to removing the package.






    share|improve this answer



















    • 1




      I found this very helpful and I'm happy to accept this as the answer. I've provided my own answer because there are some extra, annoying things that BetBlocker does which I found pretty intrusive, to say the least. Not ideal. I found the segment regarding dpkg-deb interesting, I didn't know that. I was struggling to find the package name as it seemed to be trying to hide that information from me (or more likely I just didn't know where to look!).
      – Jack hardcastle
      Dec 2 at 1:28















    up vote
    1
    down vote



    accepted







    up vote
    1
    down vote



    accepted






    According to betblocker.org:




    Please remember that once the tool is activated you cannot remove the restrictions until your selected restriction length has expired.




    Only they can tell you what that means.



    Instead of circumventing the software, have you considered if there is an option to make your Facebook or YouTube interactions less impeded? Maybe you can provide feedback by contacting betblocker and see if they can work on helping you, and others, in similar situations.



    In the meantime, you can investigate which packages you do have installed (sudo apt list --installed or sudo dpkg -l). You can use grep to filter the output. grep is CaSe SeNsItIvE by default.



    Examples:




    1. sudo dpkg -l | grep bet

    2. sudo dpkg -l | grep Bet


    Once you find the name of the package, it can be removed with apt, or dpkg:




    • sudo apt remove NAME

    • sudo dpkg -r NAME


    If you cannot find any packages, you can look through the list, without using grep, and see if you find any suspicious packages. Don't go removing random packages, but you may see something glaring. Double-check before you remove anything, and if you do, back everything up.





    If you have the original package (.deb), you can use dpkg-deb to inspect the package file, which contains data such as the name, and files that it installs. I downloaded the latest, so it could be different:



    $ dpkg-deb -f /tmp/bet-blocker_1.0.0_amd64.deb 
    Package: bet-blocker
    Version: 1.0.0
    License: SEE LICENSE IN LICENSE.md
    Vendor: Komshita <komshita@gmail.com>
    Architecture: amd64
    Maintainer: Komshita <komshita@gmail.com>
    Installed-Size: 269983
    Depends: gconf2, gconf-service, libnotify4, libappindicator1, libxtst6, libnss3, libxss1
    Section: default
    Priority: extra
    Homepage: http://bet-blocker.com
    Description: BetBlocker
    Bet Blocker, blocks unwanted websites

    $ sudo dpkg -r bet-blocker


    As noted, you'll need to make adjustments to your /etc/hosts in addition to removing the package.






    share|improve this answer














    According to betblocker.org:




    Please remember that once the tool is activated you cannot remove the restrictions until your selected restriction length has expired.




    Only they can tell you what that means.



    Instead of circumventing the software, have you considered if there is an option to make your Facebook or YouTube interactions less impeded? Maybe you can provide feedback by contacting betblocker and see if they can work on helping you, and others, in similar situations.



    In the meantime, you can investigate which packages you do have installed (sudo apt list --installed or sudo dpkg -l). You can use grep to filter the output. grep is CaSe SeNsItIvE by default.



    Examples:




    1. sudo dpkg -l | grep bet

    2. sudo dpkg -l | grep Bet


    Once you find the name of the package, it can be removed with apt, or dpkg:




    • sudo apt remove NAME

    • sudo dpkg -r NAME


    If you cannot find any packages, you can look through the list, without using grep, and see if you find any suspicious packages. Don't go removing random packages, but you may see something glaring. Double-check before you remove anything, and if you do, back everything up.





    If you have the original package (.deb), you can use dpkg-deb to inspect the package file, which contains data such as the name, and files that it installs. I downloaded the latest, so it could be different:



    $ dpkg-deb -f /tmp/bet-blocker_1.0.0_amd64.deb 
    Package: bet-blocker
    Version: 1.0.0
    License: SEE LICENSE IN LICENSE.md
    Vendor: Komshita <komshita@gmail.com>
    Architecture: amd64
    Maintainer: Komshita <komshita@gmail.com>
    Installed-Size: 269983
    Depends: gconf2, gconf-service, libnotify4, libappindicator1, libxtst6, libnss3, libxss1
    Section: default
    Priority: extra
    Homepage: http://bet-blocker.com
    Description: BetBlocker
    Bet Blocker, blocks unwanted websites

    $ sudo dpkg -r bet-blocker


    As noted, you'll need to make adjustments to your /etc/hosts in addition to removing the package.







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited Dec 2 at 21:58

























    answered Dec 2 at 1:14









    earthmeLon

    6,2191648




    6,2191648








    • 1




      I found this very helpful and I'm happy to accept this as the answer. I've provided my own answer because there are some extra, annoying things that BetBlocker does which I found pretty intrusive, to say the least. Not ideal. I found the segment regarding dpkg-deb interesting, I didn't know that. I was struggling to find the package name as it seemed to be trying to hide that information from me (or more likely I just didn't know where to look!).
      – Jack hardcastle
      Dec 2 at 1:28
















    • 1




      I found this very helpful and I'm happy to accept this as the answer. I've provided my own answer because there are some extra, annoying things that BetBlocker does which I found pretty intrusive, to say the least. Not ideal. I found the segment regarding dpkg-deb interesting, I didn't know that. I was struggling to find the package name as it seemed to be trying to hide that information from me (or more likely I just didn't know where to look!).
      – Jack hardcastle
      Dec 2 at 1:28










    1




    1




    I found this very helpful and I'm happy to accept this as the answer. I've provided my own answer because there are some extra, annoying things that BetBlocker does which I found pretty intrusive, to say the least. Not ideal. I found the segment regarding dpkg-deb interesting, I didn't know that. I was struggling to find the package name as it seemed to be trying to hide that information from me (or more likely I just didn't know where to look!).
    – Jack hardcastle
    Dec 2 at 1:28






    I found this very helpful and I'm happy to accept this as the answer. I've provided my own answer because there are some extra, annoying things that BetBlocker does which I found pretty intrusive, to say the least. Not ideal. I found the segment regarding dpkg-deb interesting, I didn't know that. I was struggling to find the package name as it seemed to be trying to hide that information from me (or more likely I just didn't know where to look!).
    – Jack hardcastle
    Dec 2 at 1:28














    up vote
    1
    down vote













    Going to answer my own question. I think I've fixed it doing the following:



    Using the Synapsis package manager, I was able to find the package and mark it for removal. I then updated my packages and saw the package was removed. (Note that the package / software wasn't showing up in the Ubuntu Software Centre, nor was it listed as a package under the expected name of sudo apt-get remove betblocker, the actual name for this package was bet-blocker, I had assumed betblocker as that was the name of the software on the software launcher). Synapsis was the only manager I was able to see this package under.



    With the package removed, the websites were still blocked. This is due to the software editing the /etc/hosts/ file, annoyingly they removed all of my existing hosts while doing this (so I now have to set up all of my host configuration again). You'll want to remove the mass of clutter they've placed into your /etc/hosts and re-add your own hosts.



    More annoyingly, they also removed the localhost configuration from the hosts file which meant I was unable to sudo (which is required to edit the hosts file), if this is the case there are other question / answers on this forum as to how to do that.



    Once the /etc/hosts file has been restored you'll need to restart your PC for those settings to take effect.






    share|improve this answer



























      up vote
      1
      down vote













      Going to answer my own question. I think I've fixed it doing the following:



      Using the Synapsis package manager, I was able to find the package and mark it for removal. I then updated my packages and saw the package was removed. (Note that the package / software wasn't showing up in the Ubuntu Software Centre, nor was it listed as a package under the expected name of sudo apt-get remove betblocker, the actual name for this package was bet-blocker, I had assumed betblocker as that was the name of the software on the software launcher). Synapsis was the only manager I was able to see this package under.



      With the package removed, the websites were still blocked. This is due to the software editing the /etc/hosts/ file, annoyingly they removed all of my existing hosts while doing this (so I now have to set up all of my host configuration again). You'll want to remove the mass of clutter they've placed into your /etc/hosts and re-add your own hosts.



      More annoyingly, they also removed the localhost configuration from the hosts file which meant I was unable to sudo (which is required to edit the hosts file), if this is the case there are other question / answers on this forum as to how to do that.



      Once the /etc/hosts file has been restored you'll need to restart your PC for those settings to take effect.






      share|improve this answer

























        up vote
        1
        down vote










        up vote
        1
        down vote









        Going to answer my own question. I think I've fixed it doing the following:



        Using the Synapsis package manager, I was able to find the package and mark it for removal. I then updated my packages and saw the package was removed. (Note that the package / software wasn't showing up in the Ubuntu Software Centre, nor was it listed as a package under the expected name of sudo apt-get remove betblocker, the actual name for this package was bet-blocker, I had assumed betblocker as that was the name of the software on the software launcher). Synapsis was the only manager I was able to see this package under.



        With the package removed, the websites were still blocked. This is due to the software editing the /etc/hosts/ file, annoyingly they removed all of my existing hosts while doing this (so I now have to set up all of my host configuration again). You'll want to remove the mass of clutter they've placed into your /etc/hosts and re-add your own hosts.



        More annoyingly, they also removed the localhost configuration from the hosts file which meant I was unable to sudo (which is required to edit the hosts file), if this is the case there are other question / answers on this forum as to how to do that.



        Once the /etc/hosts file has been restored you'll need to restart your PC for those settings to take effect.






        share|improve this answer














        Going to answer my own question. I think I've fixed it doing the following:



        Using the Synapsis package manager, I was able to find the package and mark it for removal. I then updated my packages and saw the package was removed. (Note that the package / software wasn't showing up in the Ubuntu Software Centre, nor was it listed as a package under the expected name of sudo apt-get remove betblocker, the actual name for this package was bet-blocker, I had assumed betblocker as that was the name of the software on the software launcher). Synapsis was the only manager I was able to see this package under.



        With the package removed, the websites were still blocked. This is due to the software editing the /etc/hosts/ file, annoyingly they removed all of my existing hosts while doing this (so I now have to set up all of my host configuration again). You'll want to remove the mass of clutter they've placed into your /etc/hosts and re-add your own hosts.



        More annoyingly, they also removed the localhost configuration from the hosts file which meant I was unable to sudo (which is required to edit the hosts file), if this is the case there are other question / answers on this forum as to how to do that.



        Once the /etc/hosts file has been restored you'll need to restart your PC for those settings to take effect.







        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited Dec 3 at 12:25

























        answered Dec 2 at 1:25









        Jack hardcastle

        1136




        1136






























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