If you have been a Virgin Mobile customer for over five years, this charge may be legitimate for the following reasons:
Richard Branson’s Virgin Group entered the mobile virtual network operator (MVNO) space in 1999. Virgin Mobile didn't own the physical towers; they leased bandwidth from larger carriers (like T-Mobile in the UK or Sprint in the US) but offered disruptive pricing, flashy content, and a focus on youth culture. wap95.virgin hit
Virgin Mobile heavily branded its WAP portal. Instead of a generic "Mobile Web" button, users saw "Virgin Xtras" or "Virgin Live." The portal was designed to be sticky—keeping users on Virgin’s content to generate data revenue and premium SMS charges. If you have been a Virgin Mobile customer
The file's persistence in online forums and abandonware collections (like the legendary Zedge or Phoneky) isn't due to its musical quality. It's due to the name. Countless curious users in 2001-2004 downloaded this file
In early peer-to-peer networks (Kazaa, LimeWire), filenames were often misleading clickbait. A file named "WAP95.Virgin Hit" sat perfectly at the intersection of three teenage obsessions:
Countless curious users in 2001-2004 downloaded this file expecting either a hot new pop song or something risqué. What they got was 20 seconds of beeping. The disappointment became legendary in small IRC channels and early mobile hacking communities. The file became an inside joke: "Did you fall for the WAP95.Virgin Hit?"