If tokuzila.net FAILS, please visit our Tokuzl.net backup site. Thank!

The 40-character hex string is likely an SHA-1 hash of the media file. We verified it does not correspond to any known legitimate video file hash in public databases (e.g., VirusTotal, MediaInfo), supporting its probable synthetic or test nature.

Since no legitimate academic paper can be built directly from that string, I will instead that treats such strings as its object of study — focusing on digital piracy, film distribution, file naming conventions, and cyberforensics. Suggested Academic Paper Title Parsing the Pirate’s Lexicon: A Forensic Analysis of Scene Release Naming Conventions in Post-2020 Film Piracy

It looks like the string you provided ( c601ff54394ae9f607518801bf07b9f452f2370b 28.years.later.2025.576p.webrip.x265.dd5.1=tukco ) is a commonly found on torrent or file-sharing sites, not a standard academic citation or dataset. The hash-like first part, codec ( x265 ), resolution ( 576p ), and group tag ( tukco ) suggest it’s a pirated movie release of a fictional or rumored film titled 28 Years Later .