For the curious, remember that with great search power comes great responsibility. Indexing is not permission. Just because a file is on Google does not mean you are allowed to use its contents.
| A (Column) | B (Column) | C (Column) | D (Column) | … | |------------|------------|------------|------------|---| | | Username | Email | Password (hashed) | Optional fields (e.g., role, status) | | 001 | jdoe | jdoe@example.com | e3afed0047b08059d0fada10f400c1e5 | Admin | | 002 | asmith | asmith@example.org | 5f4dcc3b5aa765d61d8327deb882cf99 | User | | … | … | … | … | … | filetype xls username password email
The search query you've provided, filetype:xls username password email , is a classic "Google Dork" used to find publicly indexed Excel spreadsheets that may contain sensitive login information. For the curious, remember that with great search
Well-meaning developers include test data—complete with fake (sometimes real) credentials—inside public GitHub repositories or project wikis. When those wikis export files, the Excel sheets become searchable. | A (Column) | B (Column) | C
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