35k — Mix Dehashed.txt

Files like these are commonly traded or shared on forums and repositories specialized in OSINT (Open Source Intelligence) and penetration testing. They pose several risks: Credential Stuffing: Speeding up massive leaks databases

The file typically refers to a compiled dataset often found in cybersecurity and data breach contexts, containing approximately 35,000 sets of user credentials that have been "dehashed" or decrypted into plain text. Understanding the Components

: A standard flat-file format, making the data easily readable by automated tools used for credential stuffing attacks. Security Implications

: Represents the quantity of entries (roughly 35,000 lines of data).