11-04-2012, 01:33 PM
Method 1- Find out what they don’t want the robots to see…
Chances are if they don’t want Google to see it, they don’t want you to see it. For whatever reason, they think creating a robots.txt will hide all their content. Well, luckily for us, it doesn’t work that way.
How? Simple. Type the main domain followed by /robots.txt
Example:
[hide]http: //website.com/robots.txt[/hide]
Now, this isn’t usually the best method, but it shows how dumb some Warriors are as some of them show the exact directories or direct links to download the product. I don’t know why, but I always try that one first, I guess just for some laughs.
Method 2 - Force a search…
Most people don’t know that even if there is no search box on the site, you can easily append some text to the URL to force WordPress to do a search. It’s a great way for finding hidden content.
How? Simple. Type the domain followed by /?s=download
Example:
[hide]http: //website.com/?s=download[/hide]
This trick seems to work for about 75% of the WSO’s I’ve come across if their sales page is built on WordPress. What this does is shows a search results page with all the posts containing “download” in them, and a lot of the times it’ll show posts even if it doesn’t contain that word.
Chances are if they don’t want Google to see it, they don’t want you to see it. For whatever reason, they think creating a robots.txt will hide all their content. Well, luckily for us, it doesn’t work that way.
How? Simple. Type the main domain followed by /robots.txt
Example:
[hide]http: //website.com/robots.txt[/hide]
Now, this isn’t usually the best method, but it shows how dumb some Warriors are as some of them show the exact directories or direct links to download the product. I don’t know why, but I always try that one first, I guess just for some laughs.
Method 2 - Force a search…
Most people don’t know that even if there is no search box on the site, you can easily append some text to the URL to force WordPress to do a search. It’s a great way for finding hidden content.
How? Simple. Type the domain followed by /?s=download
Example:
[hide]http: //website.com/?s=download[/hide]
This trick seems to work for about 75% of the WSO’s I’ve come across if their sales page is built on WordPress. What this does is shows a search results page with all the posts containing “download” in them, and a lot of the times it’ll show posts even if it doesn’t contain that word.