If you want to, you can of course try to find more filenames and publish them. It will automatically recognize the filenames if they are known, and extract the remaining ones as DEADBEEF_9C022D76484096A0.txt. In this folder you can copy the file "hashes_download.txt" and then run easyMYP. ![]() Then go to the folder where you have easyMYP saved and create a subfolder called "Hash". Now to load these filenames into easyMYP, you have to first download and extract the archives. ![]() But even better is this file which has about 50% of all filenames. On the easyMYP Google Code page there is a TOR-found.rar file that has about 17% of all filenames. However, some xml files contain file paths and we can guess some filenames manually, but unfortunately not all. ![]() That's why you get these weird numbers as filenames, like DEADBEEF_9C022D76484096A0.txt. The problem with the TOR archives is that the filenames themselves are not stored in the archives, but only their hashes. ![]() Badmp3 wrote:But my question is how did you get the filenames and correct directories to show?
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