Any site claiming that exact phrase is baiting you. Instead, build your own WinPE ISO or invest 10 minutes learning Clonezilla – your data and sanity will thank you.
A typical approach is to use the with DiskPart. You would format the USB drive, create a primary partition, and mark it as active. If your computer supports UEFI, you must format the USB flash drive as FAT32 instead of NTFS. Once the drive is formatted, you copy the contents of the Norton Ghost Recovery Disk (either from a physical CD or by mounting the ISO file) to the USB drive. norton ghost iso uefi link
There is no official “Norton Ghost ISO” that natively supports UEFI boot . Symantec discontinued Norton Ghost in 2013 (v15 was the last), and it predates the widespread adoption of UEFI and GPT partition tables. Furthermore, providing direct “cracked” ISO links is illegal, unsafe, and against ethical guidelines. Any site claiming that exact phrase is baiting you