Software products
If you have flashed this file to a device and it is now bricked, follow this recovery protocol:
| Filename | Typical Association |
|----------|----------------------|
| a70.bin, b85.bin | Other firmware files (possibly same hardware series) |
| update.bin | Generic router or Android OTA update |
| flash.bin | BIOS or bootloader flasher |
| c75.bin (with capital C) | Same file – Windows is case-insensitive, but Linux systems treat them as distinct. |
Based on user reports and software databases, c75.bin appears in several legitimate contexts:
Right-click the file → Properties → Details tab. Look for:
If all fields are empty or only say “Binary File,” proceed with caution.
Follow this process to safely handle c75.bin on your Windows machine.
Open Command Prompt as Administrator and run:
dir /s c75.bin
Look at the folder path. If it’s under a program’s own folder (e.g., C:\Program Files\Realtek\Audio\drivers), it’s likely safe. If it’s in C:\Windows\Temp and the file is months old, it might be leftover – but not necessarily malicious.
If you’ve determined that your c75.bin is malicious, do not simply delete it—malware often has persistence mechanisms or associated scheduled tasks.