$A(=#1E0)D<'B OE0 D&&(()D>!D(+!G8)7Z#Z3%@%@2 M[.TP!@&&%2QNS'N8'S%O99[*G,?TBSF*>3&7/G,: X/Q?@8&S6<,+#KI#"P: M3DTK!*(X.X$!V@<-,B<&5@ 0001144204-17-023728.txt - SEC.gov
If you've encountered this file on your computer or in a set of documents, here is the "story" of how such a file usually functions and why it might be there: The "Anatomy" of G8.7z
Security researchers often analyze .7z files for "malicious indicators" like process injection or ransomware behavior. Is it helpful? If you found this file unexpectedly: $A(=#1E0)D
To provide a more specific story, could you clarify or what you were hoping it contained? 0000950103-15-005303.txt - SEC.gov
W2@ZMO@O.\_ZASW3]?G/>C#(OS! H'SFOE5.2_!5IT# M"N? UCFF,]9,QO]$.W^7ZQ9>QG5IM^M.' X$M? R
Compressed fragments containing this string sometimes appear in large, raw text data dumps from the SEC (U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission) archives, which hold vast amounts of company data and code.
If you didn't download it intentionally, do not open it . Archive files are common delivery methods for scripts that can write to remote processes. do not open it .
Use a service like Hybrid Analysis or VirusTotal to see if the file has been flagged for suspicious behavior.