Trojan:Win32/Floxif!pz: How to Remove

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Trojan:Win32/Floxif!pz is a Microsoft Defender alert linked to a dangerous Floxif infection on Windows. Rather than behaving like a simple nuisance, it can quietly hand attackers room to act, putting personal data, system reliability, and trust in the device at risk.

What makes it especially messy is the family’s habit of tampering with EXE and DLL files, so harm may reach beyond one shady installer. Some variants can talk to outside servers, fetch more malicious code, and leave a PC sluggish or unstable.

The label also carries historical baggage. Related Floxif activity surfaced during the 2017 CCleaner compromise, showing that even well-known software can be used as a delivery vehicle. That matters because cleanup is not always as simple as removing one file and moving on.

If the manual steps feel too technical, SpyHunter 5 can be used to deal with the infection. Either way, Trojan:Win32/Floxif!pz should be treated as a serious warning, not background noise, because waiting gives malware more time to dig in.

Trojan:Win32/Floxif!pz Removal Guide

Begin with Windows’ standard uninstall route before moving into manual cleanup. Removing Trojan:Win32/Floxif!pz from Apps & Features is quick and low risk, and it may remove the main program entry if it registered correctly. Even when leftovers remain, this first pass reduces clutter and makes later checks easier to verify.

Remove Trojan:Win32/Floxif!pz through Apps & Features

15 mins
    Remove Trojan:Win32/Floxif!pz through Apps & Features1

  1. 1
    1.1
    Start with the installed-apps list if Trojan:Win32/Floxif!pz appears there. Open the Start Menu, select Settings, and go to the area that manages installed apps and default features.
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    1.2
    In Settings, open Apps. Use the search box or the filters for name, size, or install date to narrow the list to entries you do not recognize.
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    1.3
    Sort by Installation date so recent additions move to the top. That makes it easier to inspect items that showed up around the time the problems started.
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    1.4
    Select a suspicious entry, click Uninstall, and finish the prompts. Do not skip removal windows that mention add-ons or companion components.
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    1.5
    Next, open C:\Users\YourUsername\AppData\Local\Programs. Look for leftover folders or executables connected to the removed app and note any unusual names.
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    1.6
    If a leftover folder is clearly related, delete it. Restart Windows afterward to clear file locks and verify that nothing returns on the next boot.

After the restart, verify that Trojan:Win32/Floxif!pz no longer appears as an entry and that the system behaves normally. If you still notice leftovers or suspicious behavior, continue with the deeper checks below to remove hidden components and block common restart points.

SUMMARY:

Threat Trojan:Win32/Floxif!pz
Category Trojan
Detection Tool

How to Fully Get Rid of Trojan:Win32/Floxif!pz

If a suspicious process is still active, it helps to identify its footprint before you start deleting files at random. With Trojan:Win32/Floxif!pz running, you can inspect file locations, parent processes, and likely triggers, which makes persistence easier to remove. That context reduces guesswork and helps confirm that all components have been handled.

1. Prepare for the Trojan:Win32/Floxif!pz removal

15 mins
    Prepare for the Trojan:Win32/Floxif!pz removal1

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    1.1
    folder options htr
    Show hidden items so you can spot files left behind by Trojan:Win32/Floxif!pz. Search for Folder Options from the Start Menu, open it, switch to the View tab, and enable Show hidden files, folders, and drives. Hidden folders are common stash points.
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    1.2
    Locked files can interrupt cleanup, so install LockHunter to remove items Windows reports as in use. It adds a right-click option, shows what is holding a file, and can delete stubborn executables or DLLs after unlocking them.

If you prefer to avoid third-party utilities, most of the cleanup for Trojan:Win32/Floxif!pz can still be done manually. When Windows reports that a file is “in use,” a lock-release tool mainly saves time by avoiding repeated restarts or failed delete attempts.

LockHunter is free and usually installs within a couple of minutes. Once installed, you can open it from the right-click menu on a file or folder that refuses to delete during Trojan:Win32/Floxif!pz cleanup.

Remove Trojan:Win32/Floxif!pz Processes From the Task Manager

Stopping a single executable rarely ends persistence, because helper components can create startup entries, scheduled tasks, or small launchers that bring it back. The steps below help you locate the running binary for Trojan:Win32/Floxif!pz, remove the files it starts from, and then stop the process so it cannot immediately restart while cleanup continues.

2. Stop suspicious Trojan:Win32/Floxif!pz processes and delete their files

15 mins
    Stop suspicious Trojan:Win32/Floxif!pz processes and delete their files1

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    2.1
    Use process details to map what Trojan:Win32/Floxif!pz is doing. Press Ctrl + Shift + Esc to open Task Manager and review running apps, background processes, and resource spikes.
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    2.2
    If the simplified window opens, click More details. The expanded view shows publishers, command names, and startup impact, which makes it easier to judge what belongs there.
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    2.3
    example suspicious process
    Sort by CPU or Memory and look for unfamiliar names or steady high usage. Malware often hides behind generic labels or random strings.
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    2.4
    Right-click anything questionable and choose Open file location. The folder path and file names usually show whether it belongs to software you intentionally installed.
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    2.5
    Try deleting the containing folder. If Windows blocks the action, open LockHunter, select What’s locking this file?, release the lock, and remove the file and its folder from inside the utility.
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    2.6
    Return to Task Manager and use End task on the same process. Ending it after the file is removed reduces immediate respawns and keeps the next checks more stable.

Delete Remaining Trojan:Win32/Floxif!pz Files

Many threats survive by placing small launchers in startup folders and scattering helper files across program and user directories. Clearing those locations removes the parts that can rebuild Trojan:Win32/Floxif!pz after sign-in. In this section, you will trace and delete leftovers connected to the infection without touching normal Windows components.

3. Clean startup and program folders used for relaunching Trojan:Win32/Floxif!pz

15 mins
    Clean startup and program folders used for relaunching Trojan:Win32/Floxif!pz1

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    3.1
    Start with relaunch paths commonly used by Trojan:Win32/Floxif!pz: C:\ProgramData\Microsoft\Windows\Start Menu\Programs\Startup and C:\Users\YourUsername\AppData\Roaming\Microsoft\Windows\Start Menu\Programs\Startup. Remove unknown shortcuts or executables.
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    3.2
    In both Startup folders, keep desktop.ini and remove other suspicious items. If deletion is blocked, use LockHunter to unlock and delete them safely.
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    3.3
    Check main program locations next – C:\Program Files and C:\Program Files (x86). Remove newly created, empty, or oddly named folders that do not match software you installed.
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    3.4
    Review user-level paths as well: C:\Users\YourUsername\AppData\Local\, C:\Users\YourUsername\AppData\Local\Programs, and C:\Users\YourUsername\AppData\Roaming\Microsoft\Windows\Start Menu\Programs. These locations often store launchers, updater stubs, or scripts.
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    3.5
    delete temp files
    Clear temporary files: open C:\Users\YourUsername\AppData\Local\Temp, press Ctrl + A to select all, delete the contents, and empty the Recycle Bin.

Remove Suspicious Trojan:Win32/Floxif!pz Scheduled Tasks

Scheduled tasks are a common persistence method because they can run on a timer, at logon, or after specific system events without opening a visible window. Reviewing what each task launches helps you identify the exact trigger that brings Trojan:Win32/Floxif!pz back.

4. Disable scheduled tasks that relaunch Trojan:Win32/Floxif!pz

15 mins
    Disable scheduled tasks that relaunch Trojan:Win32/Floxif!pz1

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    4.1
    task scheduler
    Open Task Scheduler to find triggers that can relaunch Trojan:Win32/Floxif!pz. Search for it from the Start Menu, launch it, and expand the Task Scheduler Library to review tasks for your account and system folders.
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    4.2
    Double-click a task to open Properties. Check Actions to see which command or file is launched and what parameters are supplied.
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    4.3
    Focus on tasks that point to user directories such as AppData or Roaming, especially when the names are unfamiliar. Legitimate vendor tasks usually point to normal program folders.
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    4.4
    If a task looks illegitimate, copy the full path shown under Actions, then delete the task in Task Scheduler to stop automatic execution.
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    4.5
    Browse to the copied path and remove the referenced executable or script. Deleting the task without removing its payload can leave a restart point behind.
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    4.6
    Repeat this review for every folder under the Task Scheduler Library, including subfolders created by installers. Persistence often hides behind generic task names.

Remove Trojan:Win32/Floxif!pz Persistence Entries in the Windows Registry

Even after visible cleanup, Registry values can still point to missing executables, enforce unwanted policies, or add autostart entries that recreate components. Work carefully and remove only entries you confirm are unwanted. The goal is to delete startup hooks linked to Trojan:Win32/Floxif!pz without damaging normal Windows keys.

5. Remove Trojan:Win32/Floxif!pz traces with Registry Editor

15 mins
    Remove Trojan:Win32/Floxif!pz traces with Registry Editor1

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    5.1
    Open Registry Editor to review autostart data that may keep Trojan:Win32/Floxif!pz active: press Win + R, type regedit, and press Enter.
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    5.2
    Press Ctrl + F and search for the exact name you identified and removed earlier. This often reveals orphaned keys such as services or shell extensions.
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    5.3
    When a match appears, select the key in the left pane and delete it. Continue with F3 until no more entries appear across all hives.
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    5.4
    Repeat the search-and-delete cycle for any other suspicious app names you found earlier. Removing those traces helps block helper components from restoring deleted files.
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    5.5
    Run one final search for the same name to verify that no entries remain. A lingering value that points to an old path can sometimes recreate files at startup.
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    5.6
    Also inspect these common autostart and policy locations:
    HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Run
    HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\RunOnce
    HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Policies\Explorer\Run
    HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Run
    HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\RunOnce
    HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Policies\Explorer\Run
    HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\RunServices
    HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\RunServicesOnce
    HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\RunOnce\Setup
    HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services
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    5.7
    In each path, inspect the right pane for values that point to unknown executables or suspicious directories. Delete only the specific value so valid components stay intact.

Restart Windows and confirm normal boot behavior, then check that no relaunches, pop-ups, or unexplained resource spikes return. Verify that browsers and core apps behave normally. If problems continue, run an offline scanner to look for hidden drivers, repair changed settings, and make sure no tasks or startup entries can bring Trojan:Win32/Floxif!pz back.