Marco nodded, opened his laptop, and typed:
Lena owned a small accounting firm. For years, she’d used a free PDF reader, but now she had a problem: a client sent a 50-page tax form that needed filling, signing, and securing. Her free tool couldn’t edit text, add signature fields, or even split the document into smaller pieces.
They clicked “Buy now.” After entering payment details, Adobe provided a link to download the installer file named Acrobat_2020_Web_WWMUI.exe . Marco saved it to their “Software Installers” folder—not to the desktop or downloads folder where it could get lost.
They searched Adobe’s site for “Acrobat Pro 2020 perpetual” and found the correct product page. It clearly stated: “Includes 2020 version. No subscription. Works on Windows only.”
The first three search results were sketchy: “Acrobat Pro 2020 FREE full version” and “Crack + Keygen.” Lena stopped him. “Those are malware traps. Never download software from unknown third-party sites. You might get viruses or have your data stolen.”