: It is used to knock servers offline by filling up all available disk space in seconds. 💡 Stay Safe

The file is a notorious example of a "ZIP bomb" (or "decompression bomb"), a malicious archive file designed to crash or disable the system reading it. âš ï¸ What is Dear-Monster.zip?

While it started as a "prank" in early internet culture, it has more serious uses today:

: It is often sent to email servers to "blow up" their antivirus scanners. When the scanner tries to inspect the file, it crashes the security software.

Modern antivirus software and modern operating systems are now much better at detecting these "monsters." They recognize the (the difference between zipped and unzipped size) and will block the file before you even click it.

Explain the of how data is compressed so tightly List other famous ZIP bombs (like 42.zip) Tell you how modern antivirus detects these today

: When unzipped, it expands into petabytes (thousands of terabytes) of data.

🚀 : Never extract a compressed file from an untrusted source, even if the file size looks "harmlessly" small. If you'd like, I can: