The suffix was where the story turned dark. According to the creepypasta, the "b" stood for "biometric."
To this day, if you search for the file, you’ll find plenty of dead links and warnings from people telling you "not to open it," keeping the myth alive for a new generation of curious clickers. 7_10_b.7z
In truth, 7_10_b.7z likely never existed as a supernatural entity. It is widely considered a —a piece of "lost media" fiction designed to play on our fears of privacy and the hidden "weight" of data. Tech experts pointed out that it was a clever take on a recursive zip file , a real type of malicious file that can crash a system by decompressing into petabytes of data. The suffix was where the story turned dark
Users started reporting that among the millions of junk files, there was a single image file hidden deep in the directory tree. It was a low-resolution, black-and-white photo of the user’s own room, taken from the perspective of their webcam, even if the webcam was supposedly disabled or covered. The timestamp on the photo? Always , at the exact time they opened the file. The Reality It is widely considered a —a piece of
When users ran the extraction, the progress bar didn't move toward 100%. Instead, the file size of the destination folder began to balloon exponentially. One user claimed it filled a 1TB hard drive in seconds with thousands of tiny, empty text files. Each file was named with a timestamp—specifically, —followed by a single letter of the alphabet. The "B" Incident