gpcloud.dll is usually located in the 'C:\WINDOWS\' folder.
None of the anti-virus scanners at VirusTotal reports anything malicious about gpcloud.dll.
If you have additional information about the file, please share it with the FreeFixer users by posting a comment at the bottom of this page.
gpcloud.dll is not signed.
None of the 48 anti-virus programs at VirusTotal detected the gpcloud.dll file.
| Property | Value |
|---|---|
| MD5 | 02cad6efaac622d00d4f8eb27fd5ac38 |
| SHA256 | d040acb5406e185b745ae07da0fec9c23acf5f42ebe1b5d72763de26da573b31 |
To help other users, please let us know what you will do with gpcloud.dll:
The poll result listed below shows what users chose to do with gpcloud.dll. 0% have voted for removal. Based on votes from 2 users.
| Votes | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Keep | 100 % | 2 | |
| Remove | 0 % | 0 |
If you feel that you need more information to determine if your should keep this file or remove it, please read this guide.
Hi, my name is Roger Karlsson. I've been running this website since 2006. I want to let you know about the FreeFixer program. FreeFixer is a freeware tool that analyzes your system and let you manually identify unwanted programs. Once you've identified some malware files, FreeFixer is pretty good at removing them. You can download FreeFixer here. It runs on Windows 2000/XP/2003/2008/2016/2019/Vista/7/8/8.1/10. Supports both 32- and 64-bit Windows.
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Please share with the other users what you think about this file. What does this file do? Is it legitimate or something that your computer is better without? Do you know how it was installed on your system? Did you install it yourself or did it come bundled with some other software? Is it running smoothly or do you get some error message? Any information that will help to document this file is welcome. Thank you for your contributions.
I'm reading all new comments so don't hesitate to post a question about the file. If I don't have the answer perhaps another user can help you.
after running a quick file scan on this particular program as well as 'gpsort.dll' I discovered that its origin was from watgorp. watgorp is to my knowledge a malicious adware and is associated with gorillaprice and the 'click.cpvdr' browser redirect adware virus, which, left for too long, can grow from irritating to dangerous. it is my recommendation that anyone who notices these files on their system deletes them and then runs a quick scan for threats, as well as a manual scan of all programs files and the like for the associated 'watgorp' 'gorillaprice' and 'gpsort.dll'.
these files together took around 8 hours of continuous work to eradicate fully, as it would appear that I had succeeded but then revive itself from one of the many roots that had been ibedded into my system.
# 1 Jan 2014, 4:46
cal grimm writes