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Because the input is corrupted, it is not possible to draft an article based on its literal content. However, below is a draft article explaining why this happens and how you might recover the original text. Decoding the Digital Static: Understanding Garbled Text

: Advanced editors like Notepad++ allow you to open a file and manually "Convert to UTF-8" or "Encode in ANSI" to see if the characters shift back into their correct form. Why It Still Happens Because the input is corrupted, it is not

In the snippet you provided, it appears that (used in Russian or Bulgarian) were likely saved in one format but are being displayed using a Latin-1 or Windows-1252 table. For example, the character Ð often appears when a UTF-8 encoded Cyrillic letter is misinterpreted. How to Recover the Original Text Why It Still Happens In the snippet you

: If the text is on a webpage, you can sometimes force the browser to change its character encoding via the "View" or "Tools" menu, though many modern browsers automate this. The text you provided appears to be a

The text you provided appears to be a sequence of caused by a "mojibake" error—an encoding mismatch where a computer incorrectly interprets characters from one script (likely Cyrillic or a specific Asian encoding) using a different standard like Windows-1252 or MacRoman.

This "textual noise" occurs when a computer program incorrectly guesses the character encoding of a file. Text is stored as numbers (binary); encoding standards like , Windows-1252 , or ISO-8859-1 act as the "dictionary" that tells the computer which letter corresponds to which number.