Meh, nothing that would make the newspapers, not even good enough remembering details about 10 years later - sorry to get your hopes up :) Internal company meeting notes, reports on legal proceedings, I remember some correspondence on a divorce, checklists and procedures for business processes, test grades and student notes from schools, that sort of stuff. Excel sheets with budgets and timekeeping sheets, just typical office stuff - no .mil or at least nothing interesting, I would have remembered if it had been anything juicy. Maybe Google results didn't show those, don't know.
It's not rocket science - go to Google.com, type "[some keyword] filetype:doc" (or pds, or xls, whatever), skip to page 10 or so, then start looking. I had to click just twice before I found (5 minutes ago) meeting minutes from some British council meeting, marked 'confidential and not for distribution', complete with names and dates/times. Go to your 'private files' folder on your machine (you know, where you store your job applications, that invitation you made once for your sister's birthday party, that sort of junk), look at the documents you'd least want somebody else to see, identify some keywords that are in those documents but not usually in others, use those as keywords in Google.
Here's a fun one: "site:gallery.mailchimp.com filetype:pdf coupon". Nothing shocking, but I still don't think Mailchimp's customers expect their email list attachments to show up like this... (disclaimer: pure speculation, maybe these are meant to be publicly available, or maybe they're not even real customers and just test data, I read it for the articles, etc.)
It's not rocket science - go to Google.com, type "[some keyword] filetype:doc" (or pds, or xls, whatever), skip to page 10 or so, then start looking. I had to click just twice before I found (5 minutes ago) meeting minutes from some British council meeting, marked 'confidential and not for distribution', complete with names and dates/times. Go to your 'private files' folder on your machine (you know, where you store your job applications, that invitation you made once for your sister's birthday party, that sort of junk), look at the documents you'd least want somebody else to see, identify some keywords that are in those documents but not usually in others, use those as keywords in Google.
Here's a fun one: "site:gallery.mailchimp.com filetype:pdf coupon". Nothing shocking, but I still don't think Mailchimp's customers expect their email list attachments to show up like this... (disclaimer: pure speculation, maybe these are meant to be publicly available, or maybe they're not even real customers and just test data, I read it for the articles, etc.)