// no records match the current filter
CASE FILE — CHARLES "penguinz0 / MoistCr1TiKaL" WHITE JR.
// no records match the current filter
These videos were watched by thousands in 2007–2010. Every time you watch a video, fragments get written to your browser cache and disk — and on forgotten laptops, family PCs, and dusty external drives from that era, those fragments can still be sitting there, orphaned but recoverable. This technique — "decache" — is the one method still surfacing never-before-seen footage. It's literally how penguinz0's first-channel videos came back in November 2025.
A PC, laptop, or external drive used roughly 2007–2012 — especially one you or family watched YouTube on. School machines, hand-me-down laptops, and old backup drives are the best candidates.
SindexMon's decache scans a Windows drive's leftover cache for orphaned video/image files and matches them against a lost-media database. No coding required — pick a drive and run start_decache.bat.
“Finding Lost Media via Internet Cache” — Decache Tutorial walks through it step by step. Background on why it works: “How 1 YouTube Glitch Changed Lost Media Forever.”
Point it at the old drive (or your current browser's cache folder) and let it work. Old Temporary Internet Files / browser cache directories are exactly where 2008-era fragments hide.
Cross-check any candidate file against this catalog: clipsearch match <file> ranks it by duration + DCT perceptual-hash against every lost video here. Then report it to the Cr1TiKal Archive (and via decache) so it's preserved forever.
Most lost media now comes back from someone's forgotten drive — not the open web. If you have hardware from that era, you might be holding the last copy in existence.