【注意】この文書にはより新しいバージョンが存在します: WCAG 2.1 解説書

WCAG 2.0 解説書

本文へジャンプ

Index Of Alita Battle Angel 2 ❲100% FRESH❳

The sequel will adapt volumes 3-6 of Yukito Kishiro’s Battle Angel Alita (Gunnm). You can find official indexes of these chapters:

This is the definitive "index" – the source material.

First and foremost: Alita: Battle Angel 2 has not been released. As of this writing, the sequel is in active development (James Cameron and Robert Rodriguez have confirmed it multiple times, with Cameron stating the script is written), but production has not begun. No principal photography, no VFX rendering, no final cut. Therefore, there is no finished film to “index.” index of alita battle angel 2

When people search for an “index of” a movie, they often hope for a raw directory of files on an unprotected server—sometimes legitimate (a studio’s internal asset server left exposed), sometimes not (a pirate’s private stash). For a movie that doesn’t exist as a complete product, any “index” claiming to contain Alita 2 is either:

I’ve explored over a dozen such “indexes” from various corners of the deep web and public directory scrapers. In every case, the result was the same: a 404 error, a redirect to a gambling site, or a single corrupted *.avi file that turned out to be a 2005 anime AMV. The sequel will adapt volumes 3-6 of Yukito

To the average user, "index of" looks like a folder name. But in the world of web architecture, an "index of" is a listing automatically generated by a web server when no default file (like index.html) is present.

For example, if a studio server technician accidentally leaves directory browsing enabled on a server holding video files, the server might display a plain text page listing every file in that folder. These pages look like old-school FTP sites from the 1990s. This is the definitive "index" – the source material

Why fans search for it: Fans assume that Robert Rodriguez or James Cameron might have left a rough cut, a test screening, or a workprint of Alita 2 on an unsecured server. They use specialized search operators (like intitle:index.of + "Alita 2" + "mp4") to find these open directories.

Let’s say you ignore the warning and click through a few open directories. What will you download?

While "index of" pages are technically just browsing, downloading copyrighted material (and Alita is very much under Disney's copyright) can lead to DMCA notices from your ISP. In extreme cases, tracking downloaders from popular open directories has led to lawsuits.