66.zip -

The decompression process consumes 100% of processing power, freezing the system.

A zip bomb is a relatively small file that, when decompressed, expands into an impossibly large amount of data—often petabytes ( terabytes) or exabytes ( petabytes). 66.zip

: Most security software now flags zip files with unusually high compression ratios as suspicious. The decompression process consumes 100% of processing power,

: While various versions exist, "66.zip" is frequently cited in cybersecurity discussions as a classic example of this denial-of-service (DoS) attack method. 66.zip

Modern systems and security software have evolved to identify these "bombs" before they are opened:

Fills the hard drive completely, causing applications to crash or the OS to fail.