passwords.txt, Regional Terms ("Maroc"), and "Extra Quality"In the field of cybersecurity, particularly in penetration testing and password auditing, wordlists are the backbone of dictionary and brute-force attacks. A file commonly named passwords.txt is a classic example—a simple text file containing potential passwords, one per line. These lists range from generic collections of the most common passwords (e.g., "123456", "password") to highly customized sets tailored for specific targets.
| Feature | Generic rockyou.txt | "extra quality maroc" |
|---------|------------------------|------------------------|
| Size | ~14M lines | ~2M lines (filtered) |
| Contains WAC1986 | No | Yes |
| Contains Inwi@2024 | No | Yes |
| Contains p@ssw0rd | Yes | Yes (but lower rank) |
| Cracking speed | Slow (too many attempts) | Fast (localized) |
| Relevance in Morocco | ~15% hit rate | ~65% hit rate (estimated) | wordlist password txt maroc extra quality
.gz or .7z).PACK (Password Analysis and Cracking Kit) can rank your wordlist by probability, so you try the best candidates first.How to audit your own home router for these vulnerabilities? The Role of Wordlists in Password Attacks: A
TP-Link Default Lists: Since TP-Link is a dominant brand in Moroccan homes, general TP-Link password lists are highly effective. A specialized TP-Link wordlist is available on the Weakpass Collection. Compress before storage: A 10GB wordlist compresses to