Mono

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'''Mono''' files can be seen as a sort of parity file to check the integrity of a file, or as a form of encoding for a file allowing it to be recovered. The format seems to have been created primarily to tweak the noses of copyright enforcers by creating a philosophical dilemma as to whether a file is truly infringing if it is derived from a copyrighted work, and can be restored to a full copy of it, but by itself has no part of the copyrighted item (and, by suitable manipulation of the "basis" file used to encode it, can even be made to be identical to a totally different meaningful file, copyrighted by somebody else or public-domain). The Monolith tool is used to create them.
 
'''Mono''' files can be seen as a sort of parity file to check the integrity of a file, or as a form of encoding for a file allowing it to be recovered. The format seems to have been created primarily to tweak the noses of copyright enforcers by creating a philosophical dilemma as to whether a file is truly infringing if it is derived from a copyrighted work, and can be restored to a full copy of it, but by itself has no part of the copyrighted item (and, by suitable manipulation of the "basis" file used to encode it, can even be made to be identical to a totally different meaningful file, copyrighted by somebody else or public-domain). The Monolith tool is used to create them.
  
A Mono file is created from two other files, a "basis" file used as a key, and an "element" file that is the source data. It is generated by a bit-by-bit XOR operation, with the basis file being repeated as needed to equal the length of the element file.
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A Mono file is created from two other files, a "basis" file used as a key, and an "element" file that is the source data. It is generated by a bit-by-bit [[Exclusive Or|XOR]] operation, with the basis file being repeated as needed to equal the length of the element file.
  
 
== Links ==
 
== Links ==

Revision as of 22:04, 4 June 2017

File Format
Name Mono
Ontology
Extension(s) .mono
Released 2004

Mono files can be seen as a sort of parity file to check the integrity of a file, or as a form of encoding for a file allowing it to be recovered. The format seems to have been created primarily to tweak the noses of copyright enforcers by creating a philosophical dilemma as to whether a file is truly infringing if it is derived from a copyrighted work, and can be restored to a full copy of it, but by itself has no part of the copyrighted item (and, by suitable manipulation of the "basis" file used to encode it, can even be made to be identical to a totally different meaningful file, copyrighted by somebody else or public-domain). The Monolith tool is used to create them.

A Mono file is created from two other files, a "basis" file used as a key, and an "element" file that is the source data. It is generated by a bit-by-bit XOR operation, with the basis file being repeated as needed to equal the length of the element file.

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