Someone typing this exact keyword expects to find a single file, roughly 5-15 MB in size, named something like Ghost115_Corporate_DOS_BootCD.iso. The ISO should contain:
“Full” in the search implies unrestricted – no trial nag, no feature limits, ability to create images of networked drives, use disk spanning, password protection, compression levels, etc.
Technically, yes, for the partition (NTFS). But you risk: nortonghost115corporatedosbootcdiso full
Strongly advised against – use Clonezilla or commercial Acronis True Image.
| Feature | Details | |---------|---------| | Imaging | Create .GHO / .GHS (splitted) images of FAT, NTFS, ext2/3 partitions | | Clone | Disk-to-disk, partition-to-partition, disk-to-image, image-to-disk | | Compression | None / Fast / High | | Network | Peer-to-peer TCP/IP, NetBIOS, multicast (GhostCast) | | Drives | IDE, SATA (in legacy mode), SCSI, USB (with DOS drivers) | | File system | Reads/writes NTFS (limited defragmentation handling) | | Sector-based | Works with any OS (Linux, BSD, even unknown FS) | Someone typing this exact keyword expects to find
The nortonghost115corporatedosbootcdiso likely refers to a bootable ISO image that contains Norton Ghost 11.5 Corporate edition, designed to boot from a CD using a minimal DOS environment. This setup would allow users to:
Norton Ghost is commercial software owned by Broadcom (formerly Symantec). Downloading or using this software without a valid license is software piracy. The following guide is for educational purposes or for users who possess a legal license. “Full” in the search implies unrestricted – no
Cybercriminals know that ghost.exe is often run with admin/root privileges (to access disks). A malicious version could:
Many such ISOs on torrent sites, archive.org “abandonware” collections, or obscure forums have been modified without disclosure.