You might want to turn off the notifications, though as that might get annoying. My thought is if WPS Office works as expected, would be to let ESET block the URLs. You can ignore them by whitelisting, but without further details, that would be a tough call for the user. Either that javascript is malicious or URL/domain have been identified as a problem. It appears it is getting javascript from to load up ads in the software. The URL warnings near the end of your video are a bit more problematic. If you're OK with that type of behavior, just ignore the Win32/KingSoft.D PUP warnings during the installation. It is getting advertising from the web, probably without fully warning the user before installation that it would be doing that. You can see this WPS Office is advertising supported (see the ad in the spreadsheet for WebStorm). At that point it is going out to a possibly shady ad-server on the web when you start the Office program. You can probably see why it is considered a PUP at 1:18 in your video.
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If the software is not working correctly, you might try installing and clicking Ignore instead of Clean if you're sure you really want WPS Office. Without further details, it's hard to tell exactly what file that is, and it may not be important. The file in question is either the WPS Office installer or one of the files inside it or that it retrieves from the web during the installation process. It is the unique identifier that goes along with the definition in the ESET database that is used to name the PUP. KingSoft.D is the signature name by which ESET labels the unwanted program. I do not expect ESET to remove that particular PUP detection for that item for everyone else, because for many it is indeed an unwanted program. I ignored ESET's PUP warning and still used the software.
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I understand that. In the past, I have installed software that included adware, but I thought it was worth it to get the free software. It doesn't make sense for ESET to ignore this software for everyone, when you're the one who has determined this particular PUP is OK for you. It means that it does something else that many users don't like. This doesn't mean it is a virus or trojan. Otherwise, they wouldn't have named the detection after the software publisher itself. It is clear that software from Kingsoft has been determined to be a Potentially Unwanted Program by ESET and/or some of its users.
![remove wps office ads remove wps office ads](https://2.bp.blogspot.com/-3ypjthubtMc/VL6Khpoz2hI/AAAAAAAADGY/kJCy59TbxTQ/s1600/wpsoffice2015.jpg)
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Or, you can temporarily turn off ESET's detection while you install the software, and turn it back on later. If you don't want it to be so aggressive and that ESET's being too cautious, you can turn PUP detection off. ESET is warning about files that may be "harmless" because you have PUP detection turned on.
![remove wps office ads remove wps office ads](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/qkhsqapZFYs/maxresdefault.jpg)
Well, it's doing exactly what it's supposed to be doing.