Elias paused. This was the moment of truth. Was the file a "false positive"—a harmless tool that the antivirus hated simply because it broke copyright laws? Or was it a Trojan horse, waiting to turn his computer into a zombie for a botnet?
He navigated to a familiar, minimalist site: AppNee. He knew the risks—the site was a crossroads for "freeware" that wasn't actually free. He clicked through three layers of redirected links and pop-up ads until he found it: Appnee.com.corel.all.products.universal.keygen.by.x-force. Appnee.com.corel.all.products.universal.keygen.by.x-force