Most publicly available wallet.dat files in these indices are either empty, encrypted with strong passwords, or have already been swept by automated bots.
Some repacks include "cracking" software that requires you to pay a small "activation fee" in crypto to unlock the full list of wallets. Once you pay the fee, the software either doesn't work or provides you with useless, empty files. Why "Leaked" Wallets Are Rarely a Payday indexofbitcoinwalletdat repack
If you previously ran a Bitcoin Core node and accidentally backed up your wallet.dat to a server you forgot about: Most publicly available wallet
Cryptocurrency miners and traders often rent VPS servers to run nodes. They upload wallet.dat to the server root or a /backup folder. If they forget to turn off directory browsing, the file becomes public. Why "Leaked" Wallets Are Rarely a Payday If
Multi-wallet environment Wallets are SQLite databases. Each user-defined wallet named "wallet_name" resides in the wallets/wallet_
btc-recover --mode indexofbitcoinwallet.dat --target /dev/sdb1 --output index.json btc-recover --mode repack --index index.json --output recovered_wallet.dat --passphrase "your_old_pass"