![]() Searches for Web pages that point to the specified URL Searches for the keyword only within HyperText Markup Language (HTML) anchors (page links) Specifies that the keyword must appear within the text of the Web page Searches for the keyword in the title of the Web page Searches for the keyword in the Web page's Uniform Resource Locator (URL) Limits all search results to a single domain name and the pages contained within it The GHDB contains a wide variety of security specific searches and makes them available to the public through a few simple clicks. ![]() Also available from and maintained by the same author is the Google Hacking Database (GHDB) at. The book Google Hacking for Penetration Testers, Volume 2 (ISBN: 978-1-59749-176-1, Syngress) by Johnny Long is an entire volume dedicated to this specific subject. Quite a bit of very specific information pertaining to these types of searches is available for public consumption. ![]() Such configuration files can also contain IP addresses for the networks on which they rest, effectively giving the keys to the kingdom to the entirety of the Internet. Such searches will often locate configuration files for Cisco devices that contain the encrypted (and easily decrypted) administrative passwords for the device in question. search?hl=en&lr=&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&q=intext: “enable secret 5$” More specific to security-related issues, we can also construct searches like: search?hl=en&lr=&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&q=intext: “advanced operators” site: For example, if we wanted to search Google for pages on the website that contained the string “advanced operators” in the page text, we could put together a search string like: For most search engines, we can find an advanced operator listing by searching for the engine name and “advanced operators.” Although we will likely find some variation in advanced query construction from one search engine to the next, the construction is often fairly similar. For Google, the advanced operators can be found at and for Bing at. Lists of such operators can generally be found on the page for the search engine in question. Although the name would tend to indicate that such searching would be specific to the Google search engine, in actuality, similar search parameters can be used with almost any search engine. ![]() Google hacking is the use of advanced operators in search engine queries, in order to enable more directly targeted searches. Jason Andress, Steve Winterfeld, in Cyber Warfare (Second Edition), 2014 Google Hacking ![]()
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