bottom most
Trick question, the link is a plain blue hyoerlink near the bottom of the page you haven’t scrolled to yet
No matter where you click, it’ll open some pop-unders for the first few clicks.
You drag the button. If it takes with it more than just a button, it is an ad.
I just hover over and read URLs if I’m not sure.
This is the real answer
I actually didn’t know that. I would mouse over and look at the url.
It’s a trick question. This window is a pop-up
But only the first click
Millennial here. The true answer is None Of The Above. The actual download button is just a blue link somewhere on the page, probably among all of the torrent info.
This is the correct answer. It might also be the filename shown. If you can put your cursor over that it might become underlined. All big Download buttons are not to be trusted.
It always irked me back in the day when cnet was still a useful source because they modeled their buttons that way. Then they eventually became the garbage the site appeared to be at first glance.
Came here to say this. Closest onscreen would probably be the grey “Download or Watch” button not trying to get your attention in any way.
“or watch” is a red flag.
Yeah, the yellow link above that is more likely due to that, the shape is also a bit unusual.
But that’s why the link preview text exist.
The real download button only shows up after 30 seconds.
The file name looks like a link, it’s at least a slightly different color than the other text.
Stop. Install your favorite ad blocker, like ublock origin. Refresh.
Work smarter not harder
Back in my day, we didn’t have no fancy ublock origin
YEA! We just kept closing popups till we got the right one!!!
And then your friend sends you a link to the “You Are An Idiot” gag site so you just have to reboot.
Forgot to turn the volume down, instant regret as the speakers on the family computer scream ”HI EVERYBODY I’M LOOKING AT GAY PORNO”
Some people posted those weird links where its a jumpscare
PTSD trigger intensifies
I remember that time. Unlock saved me. Now every time I borrow a computer I have ten or 20 seconds to find the “right button” knowledge from the depth of my mind.
No lie, this is how I learnt keyboard hotkeys as a kid. I’d click middle mouse to open a link on the site in a new tab, with my hand ready to go on Ctrl + W. The nanosecond I detected a fake site, I’d closer that sucker and move onto the next link.
Oh boy did I bring a lot of viruses on my computer in the process in the name of efficiency & greed (& hefty amount of stupidity).
About 2 years ago I spent most of a Christmas sorting out my MIL’s new laptop, uninstalling junk and whatnot, and I tossed ublock origin on there. A few days ago I came back to sort out the Realtek audio drivers which uninstalled themselves via Windows Update. I find she has an entirely different laptop now, branded as"Acemagic" but through the magic of forced Microsoft Sign-in ublock origin synced to Edge on this new laptop, and there was no crapware installed despite the laptop clearly being in use for about 6 months already!
TL;DR install ublock origin on your parents computers to save yourself some trouble down the line
If you didn’t give your parents computer, digital syphilis are you really a millennial?
Install Radarr and avoid torrent websites completely.
Even with uBlock Origin, some pirate sites still have this problem because the ads either are not typical ad elements or are not in the block list. Very common with sites that host pirated android apps, in my experience.
Yes but it does solves the pop up issue completly.
Now that you say it, I haven’t seen a popup in years. They feel like a distant nightmare now.
I honestly don’t see one that looks right.
You click on the file name
In the very top right of the browser window, there should be a little ‘X’ button. That’s the one you wanna click.
The vanilla HTML button on the bottom
“Download or watch” implies that is a link to a streaming service.
The real answer is a question - Is the timer still running ?
The little grey button at the bottom of the screen
But only if that’s what your OS’s native dialog buttons look like
Jpeg of a windows dialog button while you’re using Linux? That’s a trap.
I’m not downloading an OGG file
Sorry, bub, that’s a virus. It was actually the file name itself.
The download is supposed to be a movie and the filename is a rar. Congrats on the new virus!
It’s a part file. That way you can split up the large film.
The filename doesn’t stand out in any way
looks like flux is part of the name which iirc is a real release group, and its a partial rar. no idea what the content is though
The button of a carpenter.
Beat me to it
Bottom white one?
The ones that don’t say “advertisement” under… as a gen z that commits regular piracy
There are 3 “downloads” there without advertisement written under them. Just use the most basic looking button, it’s like how the holy grail is the most plain looking one.
That or just use devtools/inspect elements.
Nah, I back out if that Frankenstein curse of a website and go somewhere else to find the download. There is no glory to be found here.
That’s all fine and dandy until you’re trying to download a .bin file containing a 12 year old version of the firmware that an ancient piece of tech your entire network relies on up and running again. Sometimes you do what you gotta do.
It’s such a rush tho, it’s like using LimeWire again.
True, I had to restore my pc a number of times using likewise. People be putting viruses up there
When you hover your mouse over a clickable area that will send you somewhere, the address shows up at the bottom of your browser. You look at where the link is pointing in order to choose correctly.
Also, none of the above. I use VPN + LibreWolf browser with built in good adblocking + a site like thepiratebay.org + using the magnet links from my search and download my movies and shows with QBittorrent.
It looks like 3 actually have advertisement under them. Gross
How do dev tools help? As a web dev, I know that easily may provide no valuable info
You can check if a button is just a link to
www.freerobbux.ru
(I hope that’s not a real site)
Can’t you just hover over it with your mouse?
Yeah, that works too
Inspect the element and check the url to see its destination. It’s not perfect but it usually shows what links go to unknown sites.
But that assume it’s not a form or javascript driven button. I would agree if you say both of those methods are sketchier, but that doesn’t mean they aren’t legit for sure.
Maybe they aren’t legit, but I have had success using these methods.
Edited my comment as I thought I was replying to the other guy.
I’m saying your method can work but also just because you don’t see a link that looks right, it’s not necessarily proof of malfeasance. Could just be a weird web dev choice, or a concerted effort to keep other services from scraping links from their page. Which maybe you already know, just adding that for anyone who does not know.
I’m saying your method can work but also just because you don’t see a link that looks right, it’s not necessarily proof of malfeasance.
True, but with as many links as the post has it’s a good way to narrow down your options, plus I assume every link on a site like this is probably malicious in some way; no risk no reward I guess.
And in situations where this method doesn’t work I can just revert to the ole’ holy grail strategy (which is clearly perfect in every way).
That leaves four
The top 2 of the remaining have that white bar which also means an ad usually, so it’s either the orange or the plain one imo