What Hoax Eliminator does
Some Korean bank, card, insurance, and government websites install separate keyboard protection, certificate, firewall, or connection modules. Several modules may remain installed or start background services even when you are no longer using the website.
Hoax Eliminator is a Windows utility that identifies many of these modules and helps remove them in one place. It is especially useful for residents or visitors who used Korean financial services and later noticed many unfamiliar security programs in Installed Apps.
When to use it
Consider a cleanup when Windows startup became slower after using several Korean financial sites, Task Manager shows multiple unfamiliar security processes, or Settings lists many modules from banks you rarely visit.
Do not assume every slow PC has this cause. Check free storage, startup programs, malware, memory pressure, and hardware health as well.
Download safely
- Open the official Hoax Eliminator page on
teus.me. - Read the latest release post and supported Windows information.
- Download the correct build for your system.
- Use the archive password shown in the official post, if the download is password-protected.
Do not download a repackaged copy from a third-party software site.
How to clean up modules
- Close browsers, banking apps, certificate windows, and document editors.
- Start Hoax Eliminator with administrator privileges.
- Review the detected list instead of selecting everything blindly.
- Keep software required by your employer, VPN, endpoint security, or a service you use every day.
- Remove clearly unused banking and government modules.
- Restart Windows and check startup time and background processes.
What happens when you revisit a bank
If a removed component is required, the website generally displays its installation page again. Install only the module requested by the service you are actively using. This is why occasional users usually do not need to keep every module installed permanently.
Important limits
Hoax Eliminator is not an antivirus scanner and does not repair damaged Windows system files. Use Windows Security for malware checks and DISM/SFC for suspected system-file corruption. On a company-managed PC, security software may be required by policy even when it appears unnecessary.

