Google Dorks12
Google Dorks12
Google Dorks12
google-dork-list
How to Use Google Dorks?
To use a Google Dork, you simply type in a Dork into the search box on Google and
press “Enter”. Here are some of the best Google Dork queries that you can use to
search for information on Google.
Google Dork Queries Examples:
site:.edu “phone number”– This Dork searches for websites on .edu domains that
contain the words “phone number”. student “phone number” – This Dork searches for
websites on .edu domains that contain the words “student” and “phone number”.
inurl:edu “login” – This Dork searches for websites on .edu domains that
contain the words “login”. This Dork searches for school websites that contain
student login information.
“powered by vbulletin” site:.edu – This Dork searches for websites on .edu
domains that contain the words “powered by vbulletin”. This Dork searches for
school websites that are running on the vbulletin forum software.
“powered by vbulletin” site:.gov – This Dork searches for websites on .gov
domains that contain the words “powered by vbulletin”. This Dork searches for
governmental websites that are running on the vbulletin forum software.
“powered by vbulletin” site:.mil – This Dork searches for websites on .mil
domains that contain the words “powered by vbulletin”. This Dork searches for
military websites that are running on the vbulletin forum software.
“powered by vbulletin” inurl:.edu – This Dork searches for websites on .edu
domains that contain the words “powered by vbulletin”. This Dork searches for
school websites that are running on the vbulletin forum software.
“powered by vbulletin” inurl:.mil – This Dork searches for websites on .mil
domains that contain the words “powered by vbulletin”. This Dork searches for
military websites that are running on the vbulletin forum software.
inurl:.com “powered by vbulletin” – This Dork searches for websites on .com
domains that contain the words “powered by vbulletin”. This Dork searches for
websites that are running on the vbulletin forum software.
inurl:.edu “register forum” – This Dork searches for websites on .edu domains
that contain the words “register forum”. This Dork searches for school websites
that allow you to register for a forum.
inurl:.gov “register forum” – This Dork searches for websites on .gov domains
that contain the words “register forum”. This Dork searches for governmental
websites that allow you to register for a forum.
Scraper API provides a proxy service designed for web scraping. With over 20
million residential IPs across 12 countries, as well as software that can handle
JavaScript rendering and solving CAPTCHAs, you can quickly complete large scraping
jobs without ever having to worry about being blocked by any servers.
Search Operators :
cache:
[cache:www.google.com web] will show the cached content with the word “web”
highlighted. This functionality is also accessible by clicking on the “Cached” link
on Google’s main results page. The query [cache:] will show the version of the web
page that Google has in its cache. For instance, [cache:www.google.com] will show
Google’s cache of the Google homepage.
link:
[link:www.google.com] will list webpages that have links pointing to the
Google homepage.
related:
[related:www.google.com] will list web pages that are similar to the Google
homepage.
info:
[info:www.google.com] will show information about the Google homepage.
define:
The query [define:] will provide a definition of the words you enter after
it, gathered from various online sources. The definition will be for the entire
phrase entered (i.e., it will include all the words in the exact order you typed
them). Eg: [define:google]
stocks:
If you begin a query with the [stocks:] operator, Google will treat the
rest of the query terms as stock ticker symbols, and will link to a page showing
stock information for those symbols. For instance, [stocks: intc yhoo] will show
information about Intel and Yahoo. (Note you must type the ticker symbols, not the
company name.)
site:
If you include [site:] in your query, Google will restrict the results to
those websites in the given domain. For instance, [help site:www.google.com] will
find pages about help within www.google.com. [help site:com] will find pages about
help within .com urls. Note there can be no space between the “site:” and the
domain.
allintitle:
If you start a query with [allintitle:], Google will restrict the results
to those with all of the query words in the title. For instance, [allintitle:
google search] will return only documents that have both “google” and “search” in
the title.
intitle:
If you include [intitle:] in your query, Google will restrict the results
to documents containing that word in the title. For instance, [intitle:google
search] will return documents that mention the word “google” in their title, and
mention the word “search” anywhere in the document (title or no). Putting
[intitle:] in front of every word in your query is equivalent to putting
[allintitle:] at the front of your query: [intitle:google intitle:search] is the
same as [allintitle: google search].
allinurl:
If you start a query with [allinurl:], Google will restrict the results to
those with all of the query words in the url. For instance, [allinurl: google
search] will return only documents that have both “google” and “search” in the url.
Note that [allinurl:] works on words, not url components. In particular, it ignores
punctuation. Thus, [allinurl: foo/bar] will restrict the results to page with the
words “foo” and “bar” in the url, but won’t require that they be separated by a
slash within that url, that they be adjacent, or that they be in that particular
word order. There is currently no way to enforce these constraints.
inurl:
If you include [inurl:] in your query, Google will restrict the results to
documents containing that word in the url. For instance, [inurl:google search] will
return documents that mention the word “google” in their url, and mention the word
“search” anywhere in the document (url or no). Putting “inurl:” in front of every
word in your query is equivalent to putting “allinurl:” at the front of your query:
[inurl:google inurl:search] is the same as [allinurl: google search].
inurl:?XDEBUG_SESSION_START=phpstorm
inurl:/config/device/wcd
inurl:\"/phpmyadmin/user_password.php
intext:\"SonarQube\" + \"by SonarSource SA.\" + \"LGPL v3\"
inurl:/xprober ext:php
intext:\"Healthy\" + \"Product model\" + \" Client IP\" + \"Ethernet\"
inurl:/phpPgAdmin/browser.php
ext:php | intitle:phpinfo \"published by the PHP Group\"
allintext:\"Index Of\" \"sftp-config.json\"
inurl:_vti_bin/Authentication.asmx
\"Powered by 123LogAnalyzer\"
intitle:Snoop Servlet
allintitle:\"Pi-hole Admin Console\"
intitle:\"Lists Web Service\"
intitle:\"Monsta ftp\" intext:\"Lock session to IP\"
intitle:\"Microsoft Internet Information Services 8\" -IIS
intext:\"index of /\" \"Index of\" access_log
inurl:\"id=*\" & intext:\"warning mysql_fetch_array()\"
\"index of /private\" -site:net -site:com -site:org
inurl:\":8088/cluster/apps\"
intitle:\"index of\" \"docker.yml\"
intitle:\"index of\" \"debug.log\" OR \"debug-log\"
intext:\"This is the default welcome page used to test the correct operation of the
Apache
\"Powered by phpBB\" inurl:\"index.php?s\" OR inurl:\"index.php?style\"
intitle:\"index of\" \"powered by apache \" \"port 80\"
intitle:\"Web Server's Default Page\" intext:\"hosting using Plesk\" -www
site:ftp.*.com \"Web File Manager\"
intitle:\"Welcome to JBoss\"
intitle:\"Welcome to nginx!\" intext:\"Welcome to nginx on Debian!\" intext:\"Thank
you for\"
intitle:\"index of\" \"Served by Sun-ONE\"
-pub -pool intitle:\"index of\" \"Served by\" \"Web Server\"
intitle:\"index of\" \"server at\"
inurl:php?=id1
inurl:index.php?id=
inurl:trainers.php?id=
inurl:buy.php?category=
inurl:article.php?ID=
inurl:play_old.php?id=
inurl:declaration_more.php?decl_id=
inurl:pageid=
inurl:games.php?id=
inurl:page.php?file=
inurl:newsDetail.php?id=
inurl:gallery.php?id=
inurl:article.php?id=
inurl:show.php?id=
inurl:staff_id=
inurl:newsitem.php?num= andinurl:index.php?id=
inurl:trainers.php?id=
inurl:buy.php?category=
inurl:article.php?ID=
inurl:play_old.php?id=
inurl:declaration_more.php?decl_id=
inurl:pageid=
inurl:games.php?id=
inurl:page.php?file=
inurl:newsDetail.php?id=
inurl:gallery.php?id=
inurl:article.php?id=
inurl:show.php?id=
inurl:staff_id=
inurl:newsitem.php?num=
inurl: 1051/viewer/live/index.html?lang=en
inurl: inurl:"view.shtml" ext:shtml
inurl:"/?q=user/password/"
inurl:"/cgi-bin/guestimage.html" "Menu"
inurl:"/php/info.php" "PHP Version"
inurl:"/phpmyadmin/user_password.php
inurl:"servicedesk/customer/user/login"
inurl:"view.shtml" "Network"
inurl:"view.shtml" "camera"
inurl:"woocommerce-exporter"
inurl:/?op=register
inurl:/Jview.htm + "View Video - Java Mode"
inurl:/Jview.htm + intext:"Zoom :"
inurl:/adfs/ls/?SAMLRequest
inurl:/adfs/ls/idpinitiatedsignon
inurl:/adfs/oauth2/authorize
inurl:/cgi-bin/manlist?section
inurl:/eftclient/account/login.htm
inurl:/homej.html?
inurl:/index.html?size=2&mode=4
inurl:/pro_users/login
inurl:/wp-content/themes/altair/
inurl:/xprober ext:php
inurl:RichWidgets/Popup_Upload.aspx
inurl:Sitefinity/Authenticate/SWT
inurl:adfs inurl:wctx inurl:wtrealm -microsoft.com
inurl:authorization.ping
inurl:https://trello.com AND intext:@gmail.com AND intext:password
inurl:idp/Authn/UserPassword
inurl:idp/prp.wsf
inurl:login.seam
inurl:nidp/idff/sso
inurl:oidc/authorize
inurl:opac_css
inurl:weblogin intitle:("USG20-VPN"|"USG20W-VPN"|USG40|USG40W|USG60|
A Google Dork is a search query that looks for specific information on Google’s
search engine. Google Dorks are developed and published by hackers and are often
used in “Google Hacking”.
Google Dorks are extremely powerful. They allow you to search for a wide variety of
information on the internet and can be used to find information that you didn’t
even know existed.
Because of the power of Google Dorks, they are often used by hackers to find
information about their victims or to find information that can be used to exploit
vulnerabilities in websites and web applications.
Google Search Engine is designed to crawl anything over the internet and this helps
us to find images, text, videos, news and plethora of information sources. With
it’s tremendous capability to crawl, it indexes data along the way, which also
includes sensitive information like email addresses, login credentials, sensitive
files, website vulnerabilities, and even financial information. In many cases, We
as a user won’t be even aware of it.
Google Dork is a search query that we give to Google to look for more granular
information and retrieve relevant information quickly. For example, try to search
for your name and verify results with a search query [inurl:your-name]. Analyse the
difference. You just have told google to go for a deeper search and it did that
beautifully.
Google search service is never intended to gain unauthorised access of data but
nothing can be done if we ourselves kept data in the open and do not follow proper
security mechanisms.
Google Search is very useful as well as equally harmful at the same time. Because
it indexes everything available over the web.
You need to follow proper security mechanisms and prevent systems to expose
sensitive data. Follow OWASP, it provides standard awareness document for
developers and web application security.
Scraper API provides a proxy service designed for web scraping. With over 20
million residential IPs across 12 countries, as well as software that can handle
JavaScript rendering and solving CAPTCHAs, you can quickly complete large scraping
jobs without ever having to worry about being blocked by any servers.
Note: By no means Box Piper supports hacking. This article is written to provide
relevant information only. Always adhering to Data Privacy and Security.
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GoogleDorkingHackingDatabase
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