Turning a .py script into an .exe on Windows seems to always result in false-positive virus detection hits.
There are LOTS of discussion threads about this on stackoverflow and elsewhere. A real good summary is here.
pyinstaller from pip, pyinstaller with local-compiled bootloader, py2exe, and nuitka are the various .exe-builders I've tried so far. Various build tools result in various hit counts on virustotal.com but it seems there will always be some hits no matter what you do - this is the world we live in.
I understand that signing is an option, though the tool being distributed is free and open-source, so the signing option probably won't be pursued.
Chasing down the antivirus vendors to report false positives each time the script is edited and the .exe is rebuilt doesn't seem like a good use of time.
The question here: is it best to give up on the idea of distributing an .exe? Is a full python installation on the end user's machine, and then just distributing the .py file, the best way to go? That option seems pretty heavy-weight and overbearing and prone to more installation issues. But, if it's the only way to avoid the antivirus dance...? Or is there another middle option?