Or sometimes as:
I’m not sure what you mean. Do you want:
Why would someone want that? Because such pages are often generated by older web servers, or custom index pages that list files and subdirectories—sometimes inadvertently exposing sensitive data. inurl view index shtml link
Using Google to search for public strings is generally legal, as the information is hosted on a publicly accessible index. However, interacting with the search results crosses distinct legal boundaries.
Websites with directory listing pages, photo galleries, or file indexes that include navigation links. It is sometimes used to locate publicly accessible directories on web servers (e.g., Apache with mod_autoindex ), where the word "link" appears as a column header or a clickable file reference. Or sometimes as: I’m not sure what you mean
: Security researchers and curious users use this query to identify unprotected IoT devices [5, 9]. Security Implications
http://10.0.0.44/status/view index.shtml?pump_link_status=1 Using Google to search for public strings is
Many older webmail systems (like SquirrelMail or UebiMiau) used directory structures such as: /src/view index.shtml?mailbox=INBOX These pages often contain "link" elements for "Compose," "Inbox," "Sent," etc. Exposing these can lead to authentication bypass attempts.
inurl:view index.shtml link filetype:log