It looks like you’re trying to find web pages or vulnerabilities using a Google dork / search query:
intitle:liveapplet inurl:lvappl "1 guestbook" phprar full
That’s a very specific combination of terms, so let me explain what it seems to be targeting and what you should know.
When attackers search for:
intitle:liveapplet inurl:lvappl – they are looking for web pages that contain "liveapplet" in the title and "lvappl" in the URL. These names are uncommon today but were used in older Java applet-based live streaming or monitoring systems (e.g., webcams, industrial HMI panels, older video management software). intitle liveapplet inurl lvappl and 1 guestbook phprar full
Adding and 1 guestbook phprar full suggests they are trying to:
and 1 = check if and 1=1 or and 1=2 changes page behavior)guestbook.php file – historically poorly securedphprar – possibly php.rar, php path + rar archive extraction vulnerability)Once a full path is known, attackers can try local file inclusion, remote code execution, or download sensitive archives (.rar).
intitle: and inurl: doAround 2005–2010, it was common to see search strings like: It looks like you’re trying to find web
intitle:liveapplet inurl:lvappl
These were used by attackers (or security researchers) looking for exposed Java applet admin panels or live support chat logs (liveapplet, lvappl likely short for “live applet”).
Adding guestbook.phprar full strongly suggests someone attempting to:
guestbook.php)guestbook.phprar (a backup/archive)phprar is unusual — .rar is an archive format, and .php.rar would mean a PHP script renamed and compressed. This could indicate an attempt to retrieve source code or configuration files from a misconfigured server. Test for SQL injection ( and 1 =
The string you provided combines:
intitle:liveappletinurl:lvappland 1 (common boolean test in SQLi)guestbook (often a vulnerable script name)phprar full (possibly a typo or obfuscation of php, rar, full path disclosure)This is not a legitimate keyword for SEO, content marketing, or general user search.
It is part of a vulnerability scanning or hacking attempt syntax.
phpRAR and old guestbook scripts if not needed.