I don't understand the point of this video, your telling people to use an annoying feature that blocks you from doing normal things that everybody does
FYI, I kinda figured that the reason the feature was annoying is if it maybe is your own zip from another PC/network, you have a ton of files inside and they all get propagated the mark, it would suck having to click on every single one's checkbox, if you forget to uncheck it for the zip. Then again, if you're that smart to care and do something like that, why not just have a script that deletes them if you forget? Or... you know... simply do it with the original zip?
I was glad to see Total Commander supports it and has enabled by default. But anyway let 7 Zip have this option turned on as well. Not that it has a decisive voice, cause after M$ Defender features, COMODO HIPS stands on the way and ask all the IDs and permissions )
While now everybody focuses on unarchival software, there are other ways how downloaded files may end up without a MOTW. For example, by downloading to a FAT32 formatted USB key, by using anything but IE/Edge/Firefox/Chrome to download it (are there others? curl/wget/PowerShell do not add a MotW), or by copying/renaming the file on an OS that is not Windows. Also many backup software tools do not restore MotW when restoring files from a backup. Also, extracting a file from a downloaded .ISO or .VHDX file does not propagate MotW, even when you use Microsoft's tools for that. For me, the whole MotW looks like a kludge that *may* help you when you are using mainstream software only, but still then you have to keep your common sense. And, like some security attributes written by Cygwin-based software, it clutters your filesystem with many "useless" small files. So, I can understand that authors are reluctant to add it (My personal choice would have been, preserve MotW if the user has hidden Standard File Extensions, to protect the ignorant, but probably that would be even harder to explain).
This seems to be related to a Word feature (probably other MS-Office apps too; I haven't checked) I observed in Word 2019. Whenever you open a DOC or DOCX file, Word detects whether it has come from the internet and if so, opens it in "Protected display mode" (or whatever it actually says in English; my version is in another language and I'm translating). This disables editing and saving the file. There is a button to Enable editing; click that and it reverts to normal. When I watched your video, I first thought Word was counting on this MOTW to do its thing, and deleting it if the user clicks Enable editing. Well, yes and no. I still think the MOTW is how Word can detect the file provenance in the first place, but the enabling is done by other means. As I knew before, enabling editing is only effective if the file remains in the same folder with the same name; move or rename it, and the warning comes back. I guess Word records each enablement somewhere (the Registry, maybe), by name and folder. I don't see why Microsoft doesn't rely on deleting the MOTW for that. After all, if the user has given that file a free pass, it should hold wherever it is and however it's named. Do Office developers and Windows developers work for the same company, I wonder…
It's weird and funny at the same time because I got to know about that yesterday when I tried copying files I downloaded using my edge browser into my home folder in WSL. WSL does not hide the Zone ID files and exposes them. I felt very uneasy about those files being visible in my wsl filesystem and went on to research about them and their significance. I did realize that they were a security implementation by windows for files but I didn't know they were called mark of the web, and hadn't ever noticed that unblock option in the properties of files. Thanks for the video. It was very informative.
MacOS has something similar called a Quarantine bit that is added to some files you download. However MacOS will often say this file is damaged and to send it to the Trash even though the file is perfectly fine but since it's not signed it doesn't know. A Right-Click --> Open will usually let you run the app or open the file. In some extreme cases you have to manually remove the Quarantine Bit using the Terminal. Also if a file has been marked as dangerous the OS will refuse to let you run the app or open the file and there is nothing you can do. I've only encountered this once with the installer for FileZilla and the file was actually dangerous as it would try to install a bunch of Adware if you weren't paying attention to each step of the installer.
Except that adware is not dangerous and if you are not paying attention, you deserve what you get! Apple got RESOUNDINGLY hammered for that nonsense in the past as did Microsoft.
@@christopherkidwell9817Clearly you do not know the lengths bad actors will go to trick users into installing malware, FileZilla made it extremely difficult to find and download the non ad-ridden installer. I for one am glad that Apple proactively blocked the ad-ridden installer from running. Also Adware is HIGHLY dangerous as it can spread scams and malware and be almost impossible to remove without a complete OS re-install. I consider that highly dangerous.
I work with a lot of LAN files. Marking them as zone 3 creates all kinds of annoyances. Until now my only option was to turn off every security feature I could find. I'll dig into the issue a little more now, maybe whitelisting my LAN will allow me to re-enable some of those security options.
You should one day make some universal wizard app that would go trough all those security, utility and so options in windows from all those videos/years you do that (and note some in other apps like this) with relevant tips/information and let users choose/set them up so its all in one place and easily appliable in case you change computer and so :))
I can't remember what the process was exactly, but I did something with my nas so Windows would stop throwing a fit about untrusted files every time I touch my nas
I'm just wondering why the section with the unblock checkbox doesn't use those urls to say where it was downloaded from so the user can see before they unblock it
Isn't just Archive tools. Alt Data Streams will get "deleted" when copy a file to CD, FAT and FAT32, Maybe ExFAT and other formats because just don't support ADS and other things in NTFS and you may not get any warning when you copy between media formats. Most USB Flash still use FAT32 or ExFAT.
Question about Win settings "app and browser" control: do these controls (smartscreen, etc.) only apply to Edge browser - or other browsers I downloaded as well (e.g. Firefox)?
I change this behavior in group policy as it is quite a pain with some custom software and particularly if a vendor is sending you file based patches. I run in a controlled environment, though and it doesn't concern me. It was even blocking downloads from a safe site where I pull radio edits of music to add for broadcast. It was just too much. It was blocking dll's from vendors, wav files, almost everything I needed.
Yes, unfortunately Windows doesn't have the "exec bits" in its permissions system. They are constantly having to work around the fact that they got this wrong in the design. In Unix, Apple, Android and Linux, there is this bit so that files you may be able to read, you can't execute keeping those two classes of files apart.
Great video as always! Could you make a video about Windows Admin Center, it lets you manage Windows 10/11 devices on a web server, not just windows server!
I don't get it. Downloaded Zip files were never blocked for me, I was always able to unpack them and install their contents. I only recently noticed this warning, every one of my archive files had it, I had never checked the box until then LOL
it may be that you have been using trusted sites and it may have been download a few time OV certificate: How many downloads you need in order to ... Stack Overflow I haven't metered exactly, but it took me at least 5000 downloads in order to have my application past the "smart" screen.
What's the point of this feature? Why do you want your computer blocking you from doing stuff on it? Why do you want archiving programs adding extra junk when you extract files? You're going to press Yes on that pop-up anyway. Remember that this is the same guy that told people to send their browsing data to Google and say that it's for their "security."
as a .NET developer, i get TypeLoadException everytime my program wants to load a downloaded DLL file that has not been unblocked. So yeah, it matters.
Ngl I have yet seen anyone saved by the MotW to this day. Bad cyber hygiene and the atrociously designed default Windows privilege settings are the major culprits. Yet M$ refuses to do anything meaningful regarding the latter.
is it just me or is youtube laggin around/stil pre-re processing the video in some weird ways but even after nuking cache i.e and restart everything it looks like the video is just you doin some "generic mouth movements" while having the audio overlay just rolling over a random stock video scene lol xD
Whenever I do a file transfer in Windows 10/11, it starts transferring quickly and the speed suddenly drops in between. I also notice that the memory usage will increase during transfer and the data stored in memory will be slowly written to disk after the transfer completes. This is called write caching. But I think it has a cache limit till which it will be cached in memory and after that it doesn't get cached, resulting in drops in transfer speeds. How do I Increase the FIle transfer cache? I have tried changing various registry values like LargeSystemCache and many others, but none of them seemed to work and they also made the OS components to be unstable. Please give me a proper and working solution to this issue.
overall: same but different color, but still..same xD there plenty of those kinda things around meanwhile, in majority of cases simply follow the basic opsec rules such as "there are in reality no hot milfs in your area trying to contact you", "the nigerian prince aint goin to send you his mountains of gold" and "if its to good to be true, it most certainly is!" and all the other similar regards of the category use common sense and if you not sure about whatever firstly aquire basic knowledge on the topic before brainless executing the whatnot magical v-bux generator ^^
ADS is supported in NTFS but not e.g. FAT32. Simplest way to remove MOTW or any ADS is to copy the file(s) to a FAT32 formatted USB drive, then copy it back.
@@phaelox If it's a bunch of small files, just open Windows terminal (by default it's PowerShell) and do this: Get-Item * -Stream Zone.Identifier | ForEach-Object { Remove-Item $_.FileName -Stream $_.Stream }
@@phaelox you are correct, but if the system's security policy prohibits you from doing that, the method I shared is the simplest workaround. Sorry, I should have been more specific in my original post.
hey, i want to ask about something....i'm usin a windows 10 but when i open a game for example or watched a movie...my computer just shut down automaticly..my central unit looks like still working and the voice continue a bit before changing into a loud and annoying beep so i want to know if the problem is in my windows or in the computer itself, please
I don't need or want Windows checking images I download for its hash. And I see the need to remove the Zone Identifier. Also I pronounce URL as 'earl.'
Typical Microsoft "solution": make insecure products, claim you can't fix it because of "backwards compatibility" and then dump the responsibility onto the user, who is confronted with a myriad of useless check boxes, before he can get any work done.
I would be glad if anyone can help me everything in my pc is working fine except gaming in witcher 3 I get 80-100 fps suddenly I barely get 55 and kinda similar with every game except valorant I changed my motherboard gpu and cpu but the problem remains after upgrading my hardware the problem disappeared for couple of weeks but then again came back I have also tried wiping my disks etc is it because of any virus or is there any other reason
No. Not today. I don't want file explorer to freeze for 1 minute thanks to this "security feature" when I want to open a ISO which has this "file comes from another pc" flag in the file. ACTUALLY share your opinion about this feature rather than something stupid
Are alternate data streams unique to NTFS formatted drives? For example, can you bypass the entire "mark of the web" ecosystem by saving your downloads to an exFAT of FAT32 formatted USB flash drive?
Any chance in the future for videos like this but about Linux instead of Windows? Linux is gaining more users every day, and Windows is getting less appealing as Microsoft stuffs more ads and monetization into what is a premium, paid for OS.
@@INeedTogepi I have. When I was dailying Linux I would run out of memory constantly which would cause the system to lock up and corrupt the file system, which would have to be recovered manually in grub rescue. Tried different hardware and distros too (Debian and Fedora/RHEL based)
tbh i dont think you need this if you have a good antivirus. this feature is a lot dumber than a paid antivirus. and i dont need windows to tell me that ive downloaded the file from the web, i know that myself
If you run Windows 10 or 11, you don't need a third-party antivirus, paid or otherwise. Starting from Windows 8, Microsoft Defender is a full antivirus solution that is free, built-in and all you need.
This was introduced in Windows XP SP2 and is one of the most annoying features ever. It's just another annoying hoop to jump through in order to open a downloaded file. I disable this feature immediately. Never needed it and never will.
He did not want to add that feature at first, because like every purist MOTW adds bits to the compressed file so they got bigger. There was then a shitstorm and he finally add MOTW unwilingly.
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I don't understand the point of this video, your telling people to use an annoying feature that blocks you from doing normal things that everybody does
Priest right before an exorcism: "I'm so sorry. This child bears the Mark of the Web. There's nothing I can do."
The child must first prove themselves trustworthy
Bro wtf🤣🤣🤣🤣
You wouldn't download a child
@@DJruslan4icSays who
"I don't like that feature."
Fair enough
That's Igor Pavlov, the CREATOR AND MAINTAINER OF 7-ZIP... WTF
Lol
The zipping method really is intended for OSes that are well designed.
I dont like that feature either :)
FYI, I kinda figured that the reason the feature was annoying is if it maybe is your own zip from another PC/network, you have a ton of files inside and they all get propagated the mark, it would suck having to click on every single one's checkbox, if you forget to uncheck it for the zip.
Then again, if you're that smart to care and do something like that, why not just have a script that deletes them if you forget? Or... you know... simply do it with the original zip?
"The Mark of the Web" sounds like a saying before a ritual happens
present me:
i should really change that setting to "yes"
past me:
idk what that does or mean, but i'll set it to "yes" anyway
Setting: immoliate self in conflagoration.
me: sure why not. *click
Also me : OMG WHY IS EVERYTHING ON FIRE!
I wasn't aware of this, and I use 7-Zip.
Same. I'm adjusting my settings now.
Same, here I use 7 Zip I paused the video and set it to "Yes"
I was glad to see Total Commander supports it and has enabled by default. But anyway let 7 Zip have this option turned on as well.
Not that it has a decisive voice, cause after M$ Defender features, COMODO HIPS stands on the way and ask all the IDs and permissions )
Well, 7zip dev is russian. Why would he complicate the life for his comrades - government hackers? /S
If you use 7 zip, you don't need to be aware of the feature because 7 zip turns the feature off by default 💪
While now everybody focuses on unarchival software, there are other ways how downloaded files may end up without a MOTW. For example, by downloading to a FAT32 formatted USB key, by using anything but IE/Edge/Firefox/Chrome to download it (are there others? curl/wget/PowerShell do not add a MotW), or by copying/renaming the file on an OS that is not Windows. Also many backup software tools do not restore MotW when restoring files from a backup.
Also, extracting a file from a downloaded .ISO or .VHDX file does not propagate MotW, even when you use Microsoft's tools for that.
For me, the whole MotW looks like a kludge that *may* help you when you are using mainstream software only, but still then you have to keep your common sense. And, like some security attributes written by Cygwin-based software, it clutters your filesystem with many "useless" small files. So, I can understand that authors are reluctant to add it (My personal choice would have been, preserve MotW if the user has hidden Standard File Extensions, to protect the ignorant, but probably that would be even harder to explain).
It's very important.
Hi ThioJoe! Thanks for the heart! 😃
This seems to be related to a Word feature (probably other MS-Office apps too; I haven't checked) I observed in Word 2019.
Whenever you open a DOC or DOCX file, Word detects whether it has come from the internet and if so, opens it in "Protected display mode" (or whatever it actually says in English; my version is in another language and I'm translating). This disables editing and saving the file. There is a button to Enable editing; click that and it reverts to normal.
When I watched your video, I first thought Word was counting on this MOTW to do its thing, and deleting it if the user clicks Enable editing. Well, yes and no. I still think the MOTW is how Word can detect the file provenance in the first place, but the enabling is done by other means. As I knew before, enabling editing is only effective if the file remains in the same folder with the same name; move or rename it, and the warning comes back. I guess Word records each enablement somewhere (the Registry, maybe), by name and folder.
I don't see why Microsoft doesn't rely on deleting the MOTW for that. After all, if the user has given that file a free pass, it should hold wherever it is and however it's named.
Do Office developers and Windows developers work for the same company, I wonder…
It's weird and funny at the same time because I got to know about that yesterday when I tried copying files I downloaded using my edge browser into my home folder in WSL. WSL does not hide the Zone ID files and exposes them. I felt very uneasy about those files being visible in my wsl filesystem and went on to research about them and their significance. I did realize that they were a security implementation by windows for files but I didn't know they were called mark of the web, and hadn't ever noticed that unblock option in the properties of files.
Thanks for the video. It was very informative.
MacOS has something similar called a Quarantine bit that is added to some files you download. However MacOS will often say this file is damaged and to send it to the Trash even though the file is perfectly fine but since it's not signed it doesn't know. A Right-Click --> Open will usually let you run the app or open the file. In some extreme cases you have to manually remove the Quarantine Bit using the Terminal. Also if a file has been marked as dangerous the OS will refuse to let you run the app or open the file and there is nothing you can do. I've only encountered this once with the installer for FileZilla and the file was actually dangerous as it would try to install a bunch of Adware if you weren't paying attention to each step of the installer.
Except that adware is not dangerous and if you are not paying attention, you deserve what you get!
Apple got RESOUNDINGLY hammered for that nonsense in the past as did Microsoft.
@@christopherkidwell9817Clearly you do not know the lengths bad actors will go to trick users into installing malware, FileZilla made it extremely difficult to find and download the non ad-ridden installer. I for one am glad that Apple proactively blocked the ad-ridden installer from running. Also Adware is HIGHLY dangerous as it can spread scams and malware and be almost impossible to remove without a complete OS re-install. I consider that highly dangerous.
I work with a lot of LAN files. Marking them as zone 3 creates all kinds of annoyances. Until now my only option was to turn off every security feature I could find. I'll dig into the issue a little more now, maybe whitelisting my LAN will allow me to re-enable some of those security options.
I never knew those hidden files existed. I did know about the checkbox.
Windows warned me about my own app. Didn't use third party libraries even.
That is because it wasn't an official Microsoft thing.
You should one day make some universal wizard app that would go trough all those security, utility and so options in windows from all those videos/years you do that (and note some in other apps like this) with relevant tips/information and let users choose/set them up so its all in one place and easily appliable in case you change computer and so :))
I can't remember what the process was exactly, but I did something with my nas so Windows would stop throwing a fit about untrusted files every time I touch my nas
WOW! i never opended properties of any downloaded files and i see first time.
If you know about this and know very well how it works, you are probably like me and have added an "Unblock" option to the context menu 😂
Especially if you hardened windows, this is a must
I really appreciate you putting subtitles
That's so interesting. I changed the configurations of my 7-zip right away. Thank you.
"The mark of the web" sounds like a Spiderman movie
You got a point...
The Mark of the Web of Life and Destiny
I'm almost certain its a comic title at the very least.
I'm just wondering why the section with the unblock checkbox doesn't use those urls to say where it was downloaded from so the user can see before they unblock it
Isn't just Archive tools. Alt Data Streams will get "deleted" when copy a file to CD, FAT and FAT32, Maybe ExFAT and other formats because just don't support ADS and other things in NTFS and you may not get any warning when you copy between media formats. Most USB Flash still use FAT32 or ExFAT.
I always strive to get rid of the MOTW as soon as possible (right after downloading anything). And the guy is explaining how to actually preserve it 🤣
4:14 I actually saw those Zone.Identifier things after building a Docker image on WSL and saving it as a TAR file.
Question about Win settings "app and browser" control: do these controls (smartscreen, etc.) only apply to Edge browser - or other browsers I downloaded as well (e.g. Firefox)?
thanks joe i am now a phd level expert on the mark of the web 💯
Yup, it’s one of my messages that I send out.. it’s just a security feature that we do
I change this behavior in group policy as it is quite a pain with some custom software and particularly if a vendor is sending you file based patches. I run in a controlled environment, though and it doesn't concern me. It was even blocking downloads from a safe site where I pull radio edits of music to add for broadcast. It was just too much. It was blocking dll's from vendors, wav files, almost everything I needed.
LOL @ suggesting notepad instead of staying in the command line with "more
Never knew this. Thanks, Thio. Great video!!!
1 more reason I use WinRAR over .7z Thanks for pointing that out!! WinRAR will open ANY .ZIP file, whereas, most of the others lack this capability.
0:25 Damn! I always knew that Simon Whistler is actually a criminal hacker man!
It was really funny to hear that Igor Pavlov is "one of the developers" of 7-zip. Author really knows what he is talking about.
Bruh moment
Yes, unfortunately Windows doesn't have the "exec bits" in its permissions system. They are constantly having to work around the fact that they got this wrong in the design. In Unix, Apple, Android and Linux, there is this bit so that files you may be able to read, you can't execute keeping those two classes of files apart.
Very useful!
JC was here
tell me more about that "you can even attach a hidden image file to a text file" thing
Having upgraded to Linux.... 😉🐧
Great video as always! Could you make a video about Windows Admin Center, it lets you manage Windows 10/11 devices on a web server, not just windows server!
I ALWAYS turn this off in Group Policy, and have done since it came into XP SP2. I found it a pain more than anything.
I don't get it. Downloaded Zip files were never blocked for me, I was always able to unpack them and install their contents. I only recently noticed this warning, every one of my archive files had it, I had never checked the box until then LOL
it may be that you have been using trusted sites and it may have been download a few time
OV certificate: How many downloads you need in order to ...
Stack Overflow
I haven't metered exactly, but it took me at least 5000 downloads in order to have my application past the "smart" screen.
Fun fact: That setting was already enabled by default on my PC.
MikuMikuDance ppl love this checkbox
Awesome video, ThioJoe. Really love these deep dives into the interworkings of Windows.
What's the point of this feature? Why do you want your computer blocking you from doing stuff on it? Why do you want archiving programs adding extra junk when you extract files? You're going to press Yes on that pop-up anyway. Remember that this is the same guy that told people to send their browsing data to Google and say that it's for their "security."
Now it make sense why i copy my files into subsystem Linux in windows and it shows zone identifier zone file along with it.
that security checkbox bricked one of my USB flash drives when i was trying to flash an ISO onto it using rufus! xD
Thanks for another great video thio
ThioJoe! Thank you very much!
Are ThioJoe and Kevin Stratvert the same person? They do look similar, or is it just my eyes playing tricks on me?
I hate this option. I wish i could keep every file unblocked. Its very annoying when you have to go through several files a day
as a .NET developer, i get TypeLoadException everytime my program wants to load a downloaded DLL file that has not been unblocked. So yeah, it matters.
How is this has only 19K views? Everyone should watch this.
Interestingly enough, Firefox removes the Mark of the Web when downloading files
Ngl I have yet seen anyone saved by the MotW to this day. Bad cyber hygiene and the atrociously designed default Windows privilege settings are the major culprits. Yet M$ refuses to do anything meaningful regarding the latter.
Love 7 zip, these stupid windows features blocking my legitimate use.
is it just me or is youtube laggin around/stil pre-re processing the video in some weird ways but even after nuking cache i.e and restart everything it looks like the video is just you doin some "generic mouth movements" while having the audio overlay just rolling over a random stock video scene lol xD
We need TrolloJoe again
Who cares about tech tips when you can fool people
I've just turned off my pc and now this video popped up on my feed 😐
Whenever I do a file transfer in Windows 10/11, it starts transferring quickly and the speed suddenly drops in between. I also notice that the memory usage will increase during transfer and the data stored in memory will be slowly written to disk after the transfer completes. This is called write caching. But I think it has a cache limit till which it will be cached in memory and after that it doesn't get cached, resulting in drops in transfer speeds. How do I Increase the FIle transfer cache? I have tried changing various registry values like LargeSystemCache and many others, but none of them seemed to work and they also made the OS components to be unstable. Please give me a proper and working solution to this issue.
I don't even have that option in 7-zip
that 7zip dev is hilarious
I agree, i also don't like this feature.
What the difference between aura and deleteme
overall: same but different color, but still..same xD
there plenty of those kinda things around meanwhile, in majority of cases simply follow the basic opsec rules such as "there are in reality no hot milfs in your area trying to contact you", "the nigerian prince aint goin to send you his mountains of gold" and "if its to good to be true, it most certainly is!" and all the other similar regards of the category use common sense and if you not sure about whatever firstly aquire basic knowledge on the topic before brainless executing the whatnot magical v-bux generator ^^
Does RAR do this too?
Edit: nice it does
You recommend changing "propogate zone id" to yes in 7-zip. No, i WILL NOT do that. I do like my files unsoiled with those stupid "mark of the web".
Turned this off as soon as it got in my way the first time. I downloaded this thing on purpose, it's my problem if it causes havoc.
ADS is supported in NTFS but not e.g. FAT32. Simplest way to remove MOTW or any ADS is to copy the file(s) to a FAT32 formatted USB drive, then copy it back.
The simplest way is alt+enter to open file properties, tick the "Unblock" box and hit OK. If it's s bunch of smallish files, than sure.
@@phaelox If it's a bunch of small files, just open Windows terminal (by default it's PowerShell) and do this:
Get-Item * -Stream Zone.Identifier | ForEach-Object { Remove-Item $_.FileName -Stream $_.Stream }
@@phaelox you are correct, but if the system's security policy prohibits you from doing that, the method I shared is the simplest workaround. Sorry, I should have been more specific in my original post.
hey, i want to ask about something....i'm usin a windows 10 but when i open a game for example or watched a movie...my computer just shut down automaticly..my central unit looks like still working and the voice continue a bit before changing into a loud and annoying beep
so i want to know if the problem is in my windows or in the computer itself, please
I don't need or want Windows checking images I download for its hash. And I see the need to remove the Zone Identifier. Also I pronounce URL as 'earl.'
I checked my 7-zip and it was set yes as default. Maybe the last update set default as yes.
Yea checked mine and it was also set to as Yes.
my winrar doesnt have that option, it could be i use the free trial 🤔
I don't think I've ever seen that before...
Is this really useful?
Using packaging programs is 1990. If you want 100pro be hacked, use them.
Typical Microsoft "solution": make insecure products, claim you can't fix it because of "backwards compatibility" and then dump the responsibility onto the user, who is confronted with a myriad of useless check boxes, before he can get any work done.
most beta opensource programs will do this
I used to hate you when I was younger, now you're one of the top tech channels. How times have changed
I would be glad if anyone can help me everything in my pc is working fine except gaming in witcher 3 I get 80-100 fps suddenly I barely get 55 and kinda similar with every game except valorant
I changed my motherboard gpu and cpu but the problem remains
after upgrading my hardware the problem disappeared for couple of weeks but then again came back
I have also tried wiping my disks etc
is it because of any virus or is there any other reason
Wooo. someone else that has a winrar license
Haven't noticed this, because I don't use botnet 11.
No. Not today. I don't want file explorer to freeze for 1 minute thanks to this "security feature" when I want to open a ISO which has this "file comes from another pc" flag in the file.
ACTUALLY share your opinion about this feature rather than something stupid
never seen it
What else rhymes with google doodle? Noodle, poodle...
Are alternate data streams unique to NTFS formatted drives?
For example, can you bypass the entire "mark of the web" ecosystem by saving your downloads to an exFAT of FAT32 formatted USB flash drive?
Any chance in the future for videos like this but about Linux instead of Windows? Linux is gaining more users every day, and Windows is getting less appealing as Microsoft stuffs more ads and monetization into what is a premium, paid for OS.
Nah, Windows have more holes from 90s and older, which means more content.
Nah
I'd rather never use computers again than be stuck with Linux.
@@GoogleDoesEvil Says someone who's obviously never daily driven Linux.
@@INeedTogepi I have. When I was dailying Linux I would run out of memory constantly which would cause the system to lock up and corrupt the file system, which would have to be recovered manually in grub rescue. Tried different hardware and distros too (Debian and Fedora/RHEL based)
tbh i dont think you need this if you have a good antivirus. this feature is a lot dumber than a paid antivirus. and i dont need windows to tell me that ive downloaded the file from the web, i know that myself
If you run Windows 10 or 11, you don't need a third-party antivirus, paid or otherwise. Starting from Windows 8, Microsoft Defender is a full antivirus solution that is free, built-in and all you need.
Nice
This was introduced in Windows XP SP2 and is one of the most annoying features ever. It's just another annoying hoop to jump through in order to open a downloaded file. I disable this feature immediately. Never needed it and never will.
hm... ok
If you don’t get his sponsor, then you have no aura
Hi Joe
0:28 ok but why does that guy look kinda like lawbymike?
only time windows blocked me from opening non-executable files was when I tried running smb on raspberry pi and copied files to rpi and back
Local intranet
ok
I ignored it
Hi thiopookie ily
7zip dev is russian. Why would he complicate the life to his comrades government hackers? /S
He did not want to add that feature at first, because like every purist MOTW adds bits to the compressed file so they got bigger. There was then a shitstorm and he finally add MOTW unwilingly.
WinRAR is Russian too. Use ARJ.