Difference between revisions of "Fake"
From AMule Project FAQ
(Corrected English word spelling) |
|||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
Fake files are those which are intended to look like a file, but are in fact something else or just nothing at all. | Fake files are those which are intended to look like a file, but are in fact something else or just nothing at all. | ||
− | Sadly, fakes are hard to detect and the [[FAQ_ed2k|ed2k]] network provides little (in some aspects it is even correct to say ''none'') protection | + | Sadly, fakes are hard to detect and the [[FAQ_ed2k|ed2k]] network provides little (in some aspects it is even correct to say ''none'') protection against fakes. |
Anyway, [[aMule]] provides two ways to detect this fake files: | Anyway, [[aMule]] provides two ways to detect this fake files: |
Revision as of 17:45, 18 September 2005
Fake files are those which are intended to look like a file, but are in fact something else or just nothing at all.
Sadly, fakes are hard to detect and the ed2k network provides little (in some aspects it is even correct to say none) protection against fakes.
Anyway, aMule provides two ways to detect this fake files:
- By taking a look at the comments submitted by other clients.
- By using one of the following resources (right-click on the download -> FakeCheck):
As a tip, it is commonly usefull to take a look at the download's details (right-click on the download -> Show file details) and see if someone has set some filename which refers to some different content. If such is the case, you might suspect if the real content is what you assume it is, what that other client has set as it's filename or none of those.
Do not confuse fake with corrupt.