Many legitimate shared drives hit their download limit quickly. Scammers know this. They create fake "premium" Drive links that ask you to complete a "Human Verification" survey—which requires your phone number. This signs you up for expensive SMS subscription services that charge $30/week.
Most of these Drive links are not direct video files. They are .pdf or .docs that claim to contain the "Master link." When you click "Request Access," you aren't getting an episode; you are handing your Gmail address to a bot net. Within 24 hours, expect your inbox to flood with "Your Netflix account has been suspended" scams.
