For real-world victims of crimes that are leaked online, the knowledge that their suffering is filed, indexed, and searchable in a permanent digital library is a torture that never ends. One survivor of a kidnapping, whose ordeal was circulated on a darknet repository, described it as "being murdered every day but staying alive to feel it."
However, the future holds a grim possibility: An AI that scours the entire internet (clearnet, darknet, social media) 24/7, automatically scraping, categorizing, and ranking depraved content without any human intervention. It would learn to predict what a user wants before the user knows it. It would generate bespoke horrors. depravity repository
The only bulwark against this future is not technology, but conscious human refusal. It is the choice to look away. It is the legal framework that treats digital offenses with the same severity as physical ones. It is the education of children about the dopamine trap of shock content. For real-world victims of crimes that are leaked
To understand the depravity repository is to look into the mirror of the digital age's id. This article explores what these repositories are, the psychology of those who build them, the legal and ethical nightmares they present, and the disturbing future of curated evil. In strict technical terms, a depravity repository is any organized dataset, database, or archive that contains material specifically intended to document, celebrate, or normalize acts of extreme human cruelty. These are not accidental collections. They are built with intention, often using sophisticated metadata tagging, indexing, and redundancy protocols. It would generate bespoke horrors
The term itself is chillingly clinical. A "repository" implies organization, preservation, and accessibility. "Depravity" refers to moral corruption and wickedness. Together, they describe any digital collection—whether a hidden forum, a darknet library, or a private chat log—dedicated to the systematic collection, categorization, and sharing of humanity's darkest impulses.
Julio Gómez Herrero & José María Gómez Rodríguez developed the EZD file extension, also know as a WSxM Image Data file, for the WSxM software package. Visitor data analysis shows that these WSxM Image Data files are typically seen on Windows 10 user machines from China. A vast majority of these users are opting to use Google Chrome as their preferred internet browser.
![]() | WSxM by Julio Gómez Herrero & José María Gómez Rodríguez |
| Extension | File Type Developer | File Category | File Type Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| .STP | Unknown Developer | 3D Image Files | STEP 3D CAD File |
| .TC | TrueCrypt | Disk Image Files | TrueCrypt Volume |
| .EBH | Robert Bentley, Inc. | Data Files | eBahn Desktop Automotive Repair Information Data File |
| .CMAP | Institute for Human and Machine Cognition (IHMC) | Data Files | CmapTools Concept Map File |
| .ML5 | KIDASA Software, Inc. | Data Files | Milestones V5 Project |
| .MPX | Microsoft Corporation | Executable Files | FoxPro Compiled Menu Program |
| .3DT | G&A M.C. | Data Files | 3D Topicscape Meta Data File |
| .FXD | Microsoft Corporation | Data Files | FoxPro FoxDoc Support Data |
| .PAG | Microsoft Corporation | Data Files | Visual Basic Property PAGe File |
| .V2D | Archway Systems | 3D Image Files | VersaCAD File |
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