The frequent use of Ð followed by other symbols is the "ghost" of the Cyrillic alphabet (Russian, Ukrainian, etc.). In UTF-8, Russian characters are two-byte sequences starting with 0xD0 or 0xD1 .
The specific characters in your string—like Ð (Latin Capital Letter Eth), µ (Micro sign), and ¶ (Pilcrow)—are "tell-tale" signs of a mismatch. The frequent use of Ð followed by other
Based on common web errors and the visible "SM~20" and "20" markers, this string likely originated from: Based on common web errors and the visible
While the corruption makes the exact wording difficult to recover without the original file headers, the patterns suggest this was likely a text originally. etc.). In UTF-8
The string you provided is a classic example of , which occurs when text is encoded in one format (likely UTF-8 ) but then incorrectly decoded as another (such as Windows-1252 or ISO-8859-1 ).
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