Most recently, just last month, the company was forced to pull the latest update following an outcry over privacy issues and obscure tactics to keep the utility running in the background.īut does that make CCleaner a bad application that should be frowned upon?ĭeveloper Piriform retracted CCleaner's last update due to the controversy, so if you are running v5.44 of the software, now listed as the most recent version on the developer's site and TechSpot's download section, the above should be a non-issue. On the other hand, users had long been complaining about bundled software and popup ads appearing in the utility. Nevertheless, to be fair, this has happened to many other developers, big and small. You may recall last summer (two months after being acquired by Avast), it was disclosed that the tool had been infected with Floxif malware. Going from 6MB in February 2016 to around 15MB around its v5.41.x release in March this year. While CCleaner has certainly grown up since its 'crap cleaner' days, it's certainly gotten more bloated over the years as well. However since security giant Avast acquired it last year, it's been a stormy ride that's had many doubting how effective or trustworthy the tool really is. For a long time CCleaner has been the most popular system-cleaning tool for Windows, extending its reach to other platforms like macOS and Android phones.