
Instead of searching for applications’ service files manually, you can automatically find all of them with App Cleaner & Uninstaller’s help. Once you remove all CrashPlan’s service files, empty your Trash and reboot your Mac.
Also, we found CrashPlan service files in this location:. You should check the following locations: Check each of them for files associated with CrashPlan and remove if you find any. Navigate the ~/Library and then the /Library folders. Press the Shift+Command+G shortcut to open the Go to the Folder search field. Now you need to check your Mac for CrashPlan’s remaining files. How to remove CrashPlan remaining files from Mac In the appeared window, click the Uninstall button and follow the prompts to uninstall CrashPlan from your Mac. Double-click on the Uninstall.app file. If the app is installed per user, navigate this location: ~/Library/Application Support/CrashPlan/Uninstall.app If the app is installed for everyone, navigate the location /Library/Application Support/CrashPlan/Uninstall.app and click on Go. For this, open Finder and press the Shift+Command+G shortcut. Find the CrashPlan uninstallation file. Steps on how to uninstall CrashPlan manually: We will start by uninstalling CrashPlan with its native uninstaller and then explain how to check your Mac for its remaining files. How to uninstall CrashPlan using its native uninstaller We used App Cleaner & Uninstaller from Nektony to automatically find CrashPlan leftovers. We will explain how to find CrashPlan leftovers manually and automatically, even if you have already removed CrashPlan from your Mac. Unfortunately, the provided manual does not uninstall the application completely. Before writing this guide, we uninstalled CrashPlan using the steps provided on the CrashPlan official web page. To completely uninstall CrashPlan from Mac, you need to find and remove its remaining files.
Using applications that are not updated for the newest macOS can make the system work slowly.
Since 2017 CrashPlan has not been supported anymore. Important notes and the methodology used to uninstall CrashPlan from Mac: