The second layer is . A high-fidelity animation set, especially one compressed as a .rar archive, can be 2GB to 10GB or more. Most free file transfer tools cap sizes at 250MB to 2GB. This forces users into paid tiers or dangerous workarounds like splitting the archive into dozens of parts—a process prone to human error.
The first layer of this problem is . A proprietary animation set is intellectual property. Intercepting such a file could lead to unauthorized use, resale, or incorporation into competing products. Security, in this context, means three things: encryption during transit (so no one can read the data stream), authentication (ensuring the file reaches the correct recipient), and integrity (guaranteeing the .rar archive is not corrupted or tampered with). Free consumer services like standard email or basic cloud links often fail on these fronts. Email has strict attachment limits, and free-tier cloud links are frequently susceptible to link guessing or man-in-the-middle attacks. The second layer is
A second viable path is leveraging . Platforms like Google Drive or TeraBox offer up to 1TB free, but they are not secure by default—the provider holds the encryption keys. To fix this, a user can encrypt the "Two Handed Sword Animset Pro.rar" locally using Veracrypt (creating an encrypted container) or 7-Zip (with AES-256 encryption and a strong password) before uploading. The recipient then downloads the encrypted file and decrypts it offline. This method is secure from prying eyes at the cloud provider, but it sacrifices some convenience and speed. This forces users into paid tiers or dangerous