Another example: "In the vast expanse of the internet..."
Now, considering the example. Let's take a small part of the text to test. Download- extreme atg100.txt -974 bytes-
First, I need to go through each sentence and replace words with their synonyms. Every word should have three alternatives in the format syn2. I need to make sure I don't replace any of the specific terms like "ATG100.txt" or "malware," as those are likely not to be altered. The user mentioned skipping brands and names, so words like "Download" might be okay to replace, but "ATG100.txt" should stay as is. Another example: "In the vast expanse of the internet
Wait, the user said "convert each word with 3 alternatives formatted v2. Keep brand names." So brand names like "ATG100.txt" and "Extreme ATG100.txt" should remain as they are. So words inside the brand names are not to be altered. For example, "extreme atg100.txt" is a brand name here, so "extreme" is part of the product name? Or is "extreme" a modifier? The text says "the “extreme atg100.txt” file", but the brand name is "ATG100.txt". The "extreme" might be part of the title, which is "Extreme ATG100.txt". So in the title, "Extreme" is a modifier, not part of the brand name. Wait, the brand name is "ATG100.txt", so "extreme" is part of the title's name, but the actual brand name is "ATG100.txt". Therefore, "Extreme" in the title is a descriptor, not a brand name. So in the title, "extreme" is not a brand name, so we can replace it with alternatives. But "atg100.txt" is part of the brand name, so it should stay. Every word should have three alternatives in the format syn2