Depending on the target application and the goal of the security audit, different types of wordlists are utilized: 1. Combo Lists (User:Pass or Email:Pass)
This command takes your 100 base words and expands them into thousands of variants (adding years, capitalizing, toggling letters, appending symbols).
– Represents the second part of the string (e.g., the password).
Creating a specialized wordlist for —a powerful, self-hosted open-source markdown editor —is less about finding a "magic" list of terms and more about tailoring your workspace to reflect your personal knowledge base.
Ensuring the wordlist matches the "Input" requirements of the SilverBullet Config (e.g., format vs. a simple Conclusion
If you aren't using SilverBullet yet, it’s worth checking out for anyone who loves the "local-first" philosophy.
I’ve been digging into SilverBullet recently, and I think the way it handles metadata and indexing opens up some really interesting possibilities for custom wordlists.
Silverbullet Wordlist New! Jun 2026
Depending on the target application and the goal of the security audit, different types of wordlists are utilized: 1. Combo Lists (User:Pass or Email:Pass)
This command takes your 100 base words and expands them into thousands of variants (adding years, capitalizing, toggling letters, appending symbols).
– Represents the second part of the string (e.g., the password).
Creating a specialized wordlist for —a powerful, self-hosted open-source markdown editor —is less about finding a "magic" list of terms and more about tailoring your workspace to reflect your personal knowledge base.
Ensuring the wordlist matches the "Input" requirements of the SilverBullet Config (e.g., format vs. a simple Conclusion
If you aren't using SilverBullet yet, it’s worth checking out for anyone who loves the "local-first" philosophy.
I’ve been digging into SilverBullet recently, and I think the way it handles metadata and indexing opens up some really interesting possibilities for custom wordlists.