![]() The files themselves contain information about the CC version number, settings configuration, whether its the Free or the Pro or a trial, etc. Usually with CCleaner Pro I only see 2 of them, if I bother to look:īut on this occasion I had also just run the Portable Free version of CCleaner which is where the other 6 came from, because I hadn't bothered to turn off data sharing or automatic updates in the Portable. It found the following 8 entries to clean:Ĭhecking the individual files all 8 were put there by CCleaner itself. (Of course I haven't been using IE or any app that I know uses IE storage locations). Just for interest I did a Custom Clean analyze of Internet Explorer Temporary internet Files. It's a bit chilly up here in Cumbria at the moment with snow on the fells but we're not supposed to be leaving the house anyway and somebody shut all the pubs so we have to drink our beer alone. ![]() (At least one of them comes from CCleaner itself everytime you open it). It's just somewhere convienient to put them.Īgain you can see that by using Custom Clean to analyze Internet explorer- there will always be files in Internet Explorer Temporary Internet Files, files that haven't come from IE. Other apps such as Skype, Windows Media Player, Live Tiles on the start menu, etc., etc.use Edge/IE storage locations when they need to store temporary files. You can't fully uninstall Edge/IE, they are integrated into Windows and Windows will not work properly without them.Įven something as basic as the search on File Explorer uses Bing (via Edge) these days.Īs I said above may other apps use IE's storage space for temporary files, even though these are not generated by IE because they are in IEs temporary storage locations CCleaner sees them as belonging to IE, There are always 'Temporary internet files' and often 'Cookies' found for IE, and usually something in Edge/Edge Chrome as well. Right click in turn on each entry under Edge and Internet Explorer and select analyze to see what is found. You could check that by not running Health Check and instead opening Custom Clean. You may say that you never use those browsers, but Windows itself uses their storage, as do many Microsoft applications, even if you never open those browsers.Īgain, what Health Check is finding is not related to Brave, it's other stuff. The extra stuff that Health Check is then finding is probably from Edge or Internet Explorer temporary storage. Only the browser you have just closed, not those cookies, etc from elsewhere that Health Check is finding after the browser has been closed/cleaned. Smart Cleaner browser cleaning is only looking to clean the Brave browser if that is what you have ticked in browser cleaning, (which has already cleaned itself anyway). Which suggest that the cookies, and temporary files that Health Check is finding are from somewhere else and not from Brave browser. As far as I am aware Brave browser deletes it's cookies by default.
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