Specifically, this text appears to be a that was likely originally written in a non-Latin script (such as Chinese, Japanese, or Russian) and encoded in UTF-8 , but is being displayed as if it were Windows-1252 or ISO-8859-1 . Common Causes for this Text
When a modern UTF-8 string (where one character can be 3 bytes) is read by an older system that interprets every byte as a single character, you get a "garbage" string of accented letters and symbols. Specifically, this text appears to be a that
The garbled text you are seeing is a phenomenon known as , which occurs when computer systems use the wrong character encoding to display text. Some vintage video hardware, such as the Video
Some vintage video hardware, such as the Video Tech VTG228 , can generate scrambled text if their internal battery fails, causing the memory to produce random character arrays. How to Fix or Read It - ftfy: fixes text for you
The prefix "228-" followed by "1080P" strongly suggests a file naming convention used by media servers or downloaders.
How can I avoid producing mojibake? - ftfy: fixes text for you