So go ahead. Type that string into Google. Explore the forgotten web. And maybe—just maybe—you will see a dog waiting by a door, captured by an iSight camera in 2011, still waiting for its owner to come home from work.
In the early 2000s, there was no central registry for public webcams. If you set up an EvoCam stream on your personal website (e.g., http://www.example.com/live/live.html ), you were invisible to the world unless you submitted your link to a webcam directory.
This dork targets devices running , a webcam software for macOS that was popular in the 2000s and early 2010s. 1. Search Syntax Breakdown intitle evocam webcam html
When you type something into a standard search engine like Google, it scans the entire content of millions of web pages. This includes the visible text, the URL, and the background code. However, using "search operators" allows you to tell the search engine to look for information only in very specific parts of a webpage.
<object width="640" height="480" data="evocam.swf" type="application/x-shockwave-flash"> <param name="movie" value="evocam.swf"> <param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"> <param name="wmode" value="transparent"> </object> So go ahead
: Within the EvoCam web sharing settings, require a username and password. Change the Page Title
If you’ve spent any time in cybersecurity forums, you might have stumbled across a specific string of text: intitle:"EvoCam" inurl:"webcam.html" . To a casual user, it looks like gibberish. To a researcher, it’s a direct window into thousands of private lives. What is a Google Dork? And maybe—just maybe—you will see a dog waiting
Do you need help writing a on this vulnerability? intitle:"EvoCam" inurl:"webcam.html" - Exploit-DB