Index-of-bitcoin-wallet-dat __top__ Jun 2026
According to a 2023 report from cybersecurity firm Cado Security, over were discovered on public web servers in a single year. The vast majority contained zero balance – but 8% still held funds, with an average of 0.42 BTC per wallet (worth over $11,000 at the time). Attackers drained these within hours.
Let’s assume you ignore all warnings and download a wallet.dat from an index of listing. Here is a realistic danger timeline:
Furthermore, many of these open directories are – deliberately set up by security researchers or law enforcement to trap cybercriminals. Downloading such a file can trigger alarms and lead to IP logging, legal notices, or worse. Index-of-bitcoin-wallet-dat
: This is an index of the blocks and transactions found in the raw blockchain data files (
If an attacker obtains your wallet.dat file and it is (or encrypted with a weak password), they can import it into their own Bitcoin Core instance and immediately sweep all funds. Even if the file is encrypted, modern GPU-based brute-force attacks can crack many simple passwords in hours or days. According to a 2023 report from cybersecurity firm
During Bitcoin's early years (2011–2014), many early adopters and small business owners backed up their Bitcoin Core data directories to their personal web servers. If they didn't configure their server permissions correctly, a simple Google search for intitle:"index of" "wallet.dat" would reveal a list of downloadable files. Why wallet.dat is the "Holy Grail"
In the context of the original Bitcoin Core client (and many derivative cryptocurrencies), wallet.dat is the default filename for the . Let’s assume you ignore all warnings and download a wallet
Google has actually started removing many open directory listings from its search results as part of its effort against “doxxing” and exposed personal data. However, niche search engines like Shodan and even Bing’s “filetype:dat” searches still return results.