Some malicious websites add passwords to ZIP files. If the archive is password-protected and no password is provided, delete it immediately. A legitimate driver package is never password-locked.
| Chipset | Typical VID/PID | Driver Source | |------------------|------------------------|--------------------------------------------------------------------------------| | eMPIA EM2860 | VID_EB1A&PID_2860 | eMPIA official drivers (use for legacy systems) | | Sonix SN9C201 | VID_0C45&PID_6366 | Sonix reference drivers (often bundled with webcams) | | MacroSilicon MS210x | VID_534D&PID_2109 | MacroSilicon MS2109 drivers (YouTube community links) | | Fushicai USBTV007| VID_1B71&PID_3002 | Open-source Linux driver (Windows: use USBTV007 generic driver from GitHub) | usb-avcpt - windows 7 8 8.1 10 drivers.zip
It is a perfect artifact of the disposable tech era: hardware that was built to be thrown away, kept alive by software that was never meant to work together. Some malicious websites add passwords to ZIP files
If there is no executable file, or if the executable fails, you must force Windows to recognize the driver files manually: | Chipset | Typical VID/PID | Driver Source