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find / -name "*c3620a3jk8smz12226cimage*" 2>/dev/null Or search inside files:

For further help, provide additional context: domain name, system name (e.g., WordPress, Magento, custom app), or any error message that accompanied this string.

s3://my-bucket/images/c3620a3jk8smz12226cimage The cimage suffix might indicate a processed version (thumbnail, webp compressed, etc.). Some applications generate surrogate keys using custom Base62 encoding (alphanumeric, case-sensitive). c3620a3jk8smz12226cimage could be the output of a hash function (e.g., CRC64, xxHash) concatenated with a human-readable tag (“cimage”). 4. Temporary Cache File Web servers or reverse proxies (Varnish, Nginx) sometimes create cache files with names combining the request URL hash and a descriptor. Example:

| Abbreviation | Possible Meaning | |--------------|------------------| | cimage | Custom image | | cimage | Compressed image | | cimage | Cache image | | cimage | Cloud image | | cimage | Cropped image |

https://cdn.example.com/cache/c3620a3jk8smz12226cimage.jpg Here, c3620a3jk8smz12226cimage could be a derivative of the original image ID + timestamp + size parameters. Amazon S3, Google Cloud Storage, or Azure Blob often use strings like this as object keys. For instance: