Real stolen credentials are sold on private dark web markets (Genesis, Russian Market), not open HTTP indexes. They are sold for $5-$50 per account, never given away for free.
Verdict: The "better index" is a unicorn. It does not exist because anyone who finds it either monetizes it or gets it taken down by Facebook's internal red team within hours. index of password facebook better
Facebook doesn't store plain text passwords. They use bcrypt with a work factor of 10 or higher. Even if you download a database, you see:
$2a$10$N9qo8uLOickgx2ZMRZoMy.Mr/.j3ZnYwDfGJwF5U8LbY8vY8vY8vY
That is a hash. To crack one password, you'd need a supercomputer running for 100 years. Real stolen credentials are sold on private dark
Instead of hunting for password files, go to HaveIBeenPwned. For free, you can check if your own Facebook email was in any indexed breach. This is the legal "better" way. Facebook doesn't store plain text passwords
In your Facebook mobile app:
Now, even if an attacker has the exact plaintext of your old password from an index, they cannot enter your account.