Trustarж‰ђе±ћ Гѓ»жїќдє‹е‹™ж‰ђз®ўзђ† Гѓ»гѓљд»•дє‹дѕќй Јгѓїдё‹иё˜гѓѕгѓ§гѓљйў˜гѓ„гѓ—гѓѕгѓ™рџ™џ Гѓ»вљ Пёџ З”»еѓџз„ўж–­и»ў... Apr 2026

Trustarж‰ђе±ћ Гѓ»жїќдє‹е‹™ж‰ђз®ўзђ† Гѓ»гѓљд»•дє‹дѕќй Јгѓїдё‹иё˜гѓѕгѓ§гѓљйў˜гѓ„гѓ—гѓѕгѓ™рџ™џ Гѓ»вљ Пёџ З”»еѓџз„ўж–­и»ў... Apr 2026

If this was an email, you can often fix it by going to Actions > Other Actions > Encoding and selecting Unicode (UTF-8) .

Specifically, the "TRUSTAR" part followed by a mix of Cyrillic, accented Latin, and math symbols suggests that a string originally saved in one format (likely ) is being incorrectly displayed as another (like Windows-1252 or ISO-8859-1 ). How to Fix or Decode It If this was an email, you can often

If you are seeing this across multiple apps on Windows, it might be because your "Language for non-Unicode programs" is set incorrectly. You can find this in Control Panel > Region > Administrative . Why This Happens This usually occurs because: If this was an email