>>107150201 (OP)
You’re fine, honestly. Yūzōnō (anime) and Keiyoushi (manga) are both solid, community-trusted Aniyomi repos with clean histories. The VirusTotal warnings you saw aren’t real threats, they’re false positives from obfuscated JavaScript used for scraping. Those scripts can look “malicious” to scanners, but they don’t have system access or the ability to install anything. Aniyomi extensions live in a sandbox, they fetch and parse data, nothing more. So no, a flagged extension can’t infect your phone.
The worst you’ll see are minor annoyances, ad redirects or broken sources, not malware. As long as you stick to Yūzōnō and Keiyoushi, you’re safe. Don’t install random extensions from Discord or Telegram. That’s where actual modified APKs lurk.
Add Aniyomi to Obtainium. It automatically tracks new GitHub releases and updates your app, so you don’t have to check manually. Keeps everything clean, current, and secure. Your setup’s already safe, this just makes it effortless.
>>107150285
Relax, champ. Running suspicious URLs through VirusTotal isn’t “wintoddler” behavior, it’s basic cybersecurity hygiene. That “mass malware scanner” you’re sneering at pulls results from 70+ AV engines and threat feeds. It’s a first pass sanity check, not a magic bullet, but it’s better than trusting random scrapers that might inject junk code.
Mocking someone for verifying sources isn’t tech literacy it just proves you don't know shit. False positives happen, sure, but knowing why and how to interpret them is part of competence. The guy you’re trashing isn’t clueless, he’s applying fundamental infosec logic while you’re ranting like a broken Clippy.
He’s learning, verifying, and minimizing risk, you’re just noise. Maybe take a breath and read before barking next time. Right now, you sound less like a tech veteran and more like the malware he’s trying to avoid.