
You cannot find Kaspersky Uninstaller program any more.Data / Files / Shortcuts / Icon that are related to Kaspersky for Mac have been found in the later use on your Mac.Kaspersky for Mac can't be removed from Launchpad.Here are the common issues you may have when uninstalling Kaspersky on your Mac. So even you uninstall Kaspersky with its native Uninstaller tool, you may still have leftover problems. Kaspersky has a set of macOS protecting components, kernel extensions and other kind of services to keep it have full permission on controlling your Mac. Part 2: The Common Problems of Uninstalling Kaspersky on Mac Now empty Trash and restart your computer to finish the removal of Kaspersky on Mac. Drag the files associated with Kaspersky to Trash can folder.īy following steps above, you are close to uninstalling Kaspersky for Mac. The most common residuals could be found in: Application Support | Caches | Containers | Frameworks | Logs | Preferences | Saved | Application State | WebKitģ. Now you need to locate the Kaspersky leftover files by digging into each folder. You can see a bunch of system file folders here. IT departments can of course mandate the use of AV/Security Suites, even if they are a "Mac shop" and thankfully proactive and ready to limit a problem should it arise (rather than wait for disaster and then deal with it).Manually Uninstall Kaspersky on Mac - Step 2Ģ. Sophos, Kaspersky, BitDefender, Intego also have Mac products and offer 30-day fully functional demo. All have made strides to be lighter on system resources and not interfere with other operations (downloads, system, other foreground and background tasks). Security suites can be annoying if nothing else, telling you they are doing XYZ (update, scanning, locking PSWD MGR). Reviews tend to be overly positive (don't want to anger the vendor, your relationship) was done with a Preview copy, or on a well maintained system, not yours, while most feedback is from disgruntled people, meaning the person on Amazon etc that had trouble with the install and perhaps other problems.

Then use it just on the clone, or put the backup off line while you try it out. You can (should) make a backup (bootable clone) of your system if you want to test new software. I would assume you wont' get a straight answer here, or a straight answer directly from the horse's mouth, but you might want to at least check the Symantec Community.
