"Is it a false positive or a Trojan?" he muttered to the empty shop.
The file sat on his desktop, a digital Pandora’s Box named FRP_Bypass_Pack.rar . Marc took a breath and right-clicked to extract. His antivirus immediately screamed, a red banner flashing: telechargement-frp-removal-tools-rar
The "Verify your account" screen was gone. The "Skip" button—previously greyed out—was now a vibrant, clickable blue. "Is it a false positive or a Trojan
He moved the file to a "sandbox" laptop—an old machine he kept disconnected from the shop's main network. He ran the tool. A crude window appeared with pixelated text and a "Start Bypass" button. He connected the locked phone via USB. His antivirus immediately screamed, a red banner flashing:
Marc exhaled, wiping sweat from his forehead. He had bypassed the lock, but as he looked at the sandbox laptop, he saw a terminal window open by itself, sending encrypted packets to an unknown IP address in Eastern Europe. He reached over and physically pulled the battery from the laptop.
The results were a minefield of flashing "Download Now" buttons and suspicious pop-ups. He navigated past the bait, searching for a specific mirror link he’d heard about on an underground forum. When he finally clicked "Download," the progress bar crawled. 98%... 99%... Complete.