Some technical platforms use this nomenclature for media assets. For instance, certain search results link this specific file name to the FEAST (First European Air Traffic Controller Selection Test) , suggesting its use in professional training or testing environments.

When you took a video on a Samsung flip phone in 2007, the metadata often wrote:

A legitimate WebM video should have a file size consistent with its length; extremely small files could be placeholders or corrupted.

WebM offered superior quality at half the file size of GIFs. Automoderator bots began scraping old video dumps (circa 2005-2008) and re-uploading them to file lockers like MegaUpload and Zippyshare.

The bots were dumb. They didn't understand chronology.

In the early 2010s, malware authors exploited the confusion. They would name a malicious .exe as Nov 0002.webm.exe (with hidden file extensions enabled in Windows). Always check the real extension via properties.