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Eusbhubfilter Uninstall Top Direct

If you are trying to use tools like UnlockTool or similar service software and getting an error message saying

"Monitoring Software detected... Please Uninstall EUsbHubFilter,"

it is likely because of leftover drivers from applications like USB Redirector

Here is how to remove that specific filter to get your software running again. Method 1: The Registry Editor Fix (Recommended)

This is the most direct way to remove the "UpperFilter" causing the conflict. Open Registry Editor , and hit Enter. Navigate to the USB Class Key eusbhubfilter uninstall top

: Copy and paste the following path into the top address bar:

HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\Class\36fc9e60-c465-11cf-8056-444553540000 Identify the Filter : On the right-hand panel, look for a value named UpperFilters Edit/Delete Right-click UpperFilters and select If you see EUsbHubFilter

in the list, delete that specific line and keep any other entries (like Alternatively, if EUsbHubFilter is the only entry, you can delete the UpperFilters key entirely. : Restart your computer for the changes to take effect. Method 2: Standard Uninstallation

The filter driver is usually part of a remote USB sharing package. Check for these programs in your Control Panel > Programs and Features USB Network Gate USB Redirector If you are trying to use tools like

If they are installed, uninstalling them through the standard menu should remove the driver. However, if the error persists after uninstallation, use to clean up the leftover registry keys. Why is this happening? Software like UnlockTool

blocks execution when it detects USB redirection or monitoring drivers. These drivers allow USB devices to be shared over a network, which security-sensitive tools flag as a potential risk for unauthorized remote access or "sniffing" of the data being sent to the phone or device. specific program might have left this driver on your system?

Based on the phrasing, this command belongs to the EUSBHubFilter utility, a tool often associated with virtualization platforms (like Thales Sentinel or various Virtual Machine configurations) to manage USB device filtering and redirection.

Here is the breakdown of the solid feature and how to interpret the command: Open Device Manager

Issue: "USB Device not recognized" (Code 43)

Fix: Your USB stack is corrupted.

  1. Open Device Manager.
  2. Under Universal Serial Bus controllers, right-click every "Host Controller" and "Root Hub."
  3. Select Uninstall for all of them.
  4. Restart. Windows will automatically reinstall the standard Microsoft drivers.

Part 3: Method 2 – The Device Manager Deep Clean (For "Uninstall Failed" Errors)

If Method 1 fails because the driver is "in use" or the uninstaller crashes, you need to decouple the driver from the USB stack manually.

Step 1: Open Device Manager (Right-click Start button > Device Manager). Step 2: Click View (top menu) > Show hidden devices. (This is critical, as filter drivers often hide). Step 3: Expand Universal Serial Bus controllers. Step 4: Look for any entry with a yellow exclamation mark, or specifically look for "USB Composite Device" or "Generic USB Hub." Step 5: Right-click each of these items (start with the Hubs) and select Uninstall device. Step 6: In the confirmation dialog, check the box that says "Delete the driver software for this device." Step 7: Repeat this for every USB entry that looks related to your motherboard chipset. Step 8: After cleaning 5–10 entries, shut down your PC (not restart—shut down). Step 9: Unplug your power cord and laptop battery (if removable) for 30 seconds. Step 10: Boot up. Windows will reinstall default USB drivers without the eusbhubfilter.


Step B: Manual File Deletion

Open File Explorer and navigate to: C:\Windows\System32\drivers Find eusbhubfilter.sys and rename it to eusbhubfilter.OLD (do not delete yet—renaming breaks the link). Then delete it.