These terms are classic examples of Google Dorks (also known as Google Hacking commands), which are specialized search queries used by security researchers—and occasionally malicious actors—to find specific, often vulnerable, web applications or exposed data. 1. intitle:liveapplet inurl:lvappl
) containing a PHP-based guestbook application. These are often searched because they may contain configuration files with database credentials or "backdoor" scripts.
intitle:"liveapplet" inurl:"lvappl" "guestbook.phprar" "lifestyle and entertainment" intitle liveapplet inurl lvappl and 1 guestbook phprar hot
It looks like you're trying to create a review for a potentially suspicious or unusual search string related to intitle:liveapplet inurl:lvappl "guestbook" "phprar".
: Limits results to URLs containing "lvappl", which is often part of the directory structure for certain brands of IP cameras or network video recorders. guestbook.php These terms are classic examples of Google Dorks
inurl:lvappl: Limits results to URLs containing the string "lvappl", which typically refers to directory paths or specific executable files for legacy webcam software.
Review:
I came across this while looking for “intitle liveapplet inurl lvappl and 1 guestbook phprar hot.” This isn’t a normal software or user-friendly tool — it looks more like a legacy search operator string or part of an old exploit test. No clear functionality, documentation, or legitimate use case for normal users. If you found this in logs or search results, it’s likely automated noise or a leftover from outdated scripts. Not recommended for general use. A PHP-based guestbook would be a simple script
Vulnerability: Older PHP guestbooks are notorious for SQL Injection and Cross-Site Scripting (XSS). If a hacker finds a guestbook that doesn't "sanitize" user input, they can inject malicious code that steals cookies, redirects users to scam sites, or even takes over the web server. Why "Hot"?