Inurl View Index Shtml 24 New May 2026
Want images? Use:
inurl:view index.shtml "24 new" filetype:jpg
Google has been slowly nerfing advanced operators over the years. inurl: still works, but it is no longer as precise as it was in 2010. However, for niche extensions like .shtml, the competition is low. The big SEO tools ignore these legacy files.
To stay ahead, combine inurl:view index.shtml with: inurl view index shtml 24 new
Let’s simulate a search session.
Goal: Find a publicly accessible image gallery of a recent conference (within the last 24 hours) to use for legitimate reporting. Want images
Step 1: Open Google and type:
inurl:"view index.shtml" "24" "new"
Step 2: Review the first result. You see:
https://www.exampledomain.org/gallery/view/index.shtml?start=24&sort=new However, for niche extensions like
Step 3: Click through. The page lists 24 thumbnails, dated today. The URL indicates you are on page 2 (start=24).
Step 4: Check the parent directory. Remove view/index.shtml from the URL. If the parent directory is unprotected, you might find even more.
Step 5: Document the public nature. Take screenshots showing no login wall or robots.txt disallow.
Result: You have found fresh, indexable content that you can cite or analyze.
