A free web tool which checks your domain's servers for common DNS and mail errors and generates a report with explanations how to fix them.
Has an RSS feed.
SauceNAO is a reverse image search engine. The name 'SauceNAO' is derived from a slang form of "Need to know the source of this Now!" which has found common usage on image boards and other similar sites.
Masto is an OSINT tool written in python to gather intelligence on Mastodon users and instances.
A collection of several hundred online tools for OSINT.
BBOT is a recursive, modular OSINT framework written in Python. It is capable of executing the entire OSINT process for entire domains in a single command, including subdomain enumeration, port scanning, web screenshots (with its gowitness module), vulnerability scanning (with nuclei), and much more.
BBOT currently has over 50 modules and counting.
Requires Python v3.9.x or later.
Many aircraft broadcast information about how accurate their navigation system, which is almost always GPS, is at any given moment. The GPSJam map aggregates that data over 24 hours in time bins it into a hexagonal map. Green hexagons show where more than 98% of all aircraft who flew through that area reported good navigation accuracy. Yellow hexagons show where between 2% and 10% of aircraft reported low navigation accuracy. Red hexagons show where more than 10% of aircraft reported low navigation accuracy.
Data is pulled from ADSB Exchange.
OpenOversight is a Seattle Tech Bloc project that aims to improve law enforcement visibility and transparency using public and crowdsourced data. We maintain databases, digital galleries, and profiles of individual law enforcement officers from departments the so called Pacific Northwest that consolidate information including names, birthdates, mentions in news articles, salaries, and photographs.
This project is a response to the lack of transparency and justice in policing. The public should have the right to know which officers are patrolling their neighborhoods and watching their communities. When officers abuse their positions of power, they should be able to be easily identified and held accountable.
It is the first project of its kind in the United States, and was first implemented in Chicago in October 2016. OpenOversight launched in the East Bay of the San Francisco Bay Area in fall 2017 and in New York City in 2018. A Baltimore instance was launched in 2019 at BPDWatch.com. A Portland instance was launched around the same time at cops.photo.
Corporation Wiki exists to provide corporate transparency and historical data on companies. This allows officers to be held accountable for the actions they take through their corporations. Imagine if anybody could hide behind a fictitious name and say and do anything that they wanted without concern of discovery. If the internet provided the same level of transparency, imagine how many less trolls there would be lurking in the comment sections of websites around the world (We're talking to you, youtube).
People around the world rely on us to help validate that someone is as awesome as they say they are. Others rely on us to help them discover fraud and malice. It's a check-and-balance. As long as good and evil exist, so will we.
Welcome to Insecam project, the world's biggest directory of online surveillance security cameras. Select a country to watch live street, traffic, parking, office, road, beach, earth online webcams. Now you can search live web cams around the world. You can find here Axis, Panasonic, Linksys, Sony, TPLink, Foscam and a lot of other network video cams available online without a password. Mozilla Firefox browser is recommended to watch network cameras. Only filtered cameras are available now. This way none of the cameras on Insecam invade anybody's private life.
No, they really don't use HTTPS. Sheesh.
List of API's for gathering information about phone numbers, addresses, domains, etc.
Worldwide map of OSINT tools. 614 services (cadastral maps, business registries, public transport maps, passengers lists, vehicle information), and more.
Services broken down by country and by (USian) state.
This site provides summary information about, and access to, the “public inspection file” (or “public file”) for the following types of entities: licensed full-service radio and television broadcast stations, Class A television stations, cable television systems, direct broadcast satellite (“DBS”) providers, and satellite radio (also referred to as “Satellite Digital Audio Radio Services” or “SDARS”) licensees.
The Commission first adopted rules requiring broadcast stations to keep a public file more than 40 years ago and certain political programming files have been public for nearly 75 years. The public file for broadcast stations contains a variety of information about each station’s operations and service to its community of license, including information about political time sold or given away by each station, quarterly lists of the most significant programs each station aired concerning issues of importance to its community, data on ownership of each station and active applications each station has filed with the Commission. The Commission adopted the public inspection file requirement to "make information to which the public already has a right more readily available, so that the public will be encouraged to play a more active part in dialogue with broadcast licensees."
Cable, DBS, and SDARS entities also have public and political file requirements. These entities’ political file requirements are substantially similar to those of television and radio broadcasters. Apart from the political file, however, cable, DBS, and SDARS entities’ other public file requirements differ somewhat from the public file requirements applicable to broadcasters.
Spooky Connections is an independent international open source investigation to probe transnational organized crime. We operate using open source information from established news outlets and primary sourced documents to graph, map, and document a clear understanding of organised criminal networks and activities.
This tool aims at accumulating javascript files from a given set of subdomains to discover hidden API endpoints. It swims through JS files to find more JS files. It also creates a target-specific wordlist from the JS-files for further content discovery, appends new subdomains discovered from the JS files to the user specified subdomain file, and dumps all the discovered JS files neatly in a folder for static analysis.
It seems to set up a bunch of other tools and grinds up their output.
Enter a URL. Search a bunch of online archives simultaneously for the data stored there.
When performing passive recon on a target, there are dozens of tools we can use to gather various pieces of intel on our target. This tool will allow us to parse these utilities easily.
Without the consent of the veteran or next-of-kin, the National Personnel Records Center (NPRC) can only release limited information from the Official Military Personnel File (OMPF) to the general public. You are considered a member of the general public if you are not the veteran, asking about a veteran who is of no relation to you or seeking information about a veteran who is a relative but for whom you are not the next-of-kin. The next-of-kin is defined as any of the following: the un-remarried widow or widower, son, daughter, father, mother, brother or sister of the deceased veteran.
Such access is intended to strike a balance between the public's right to obtain information from Federal records, as outlined in the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), and the veteran's right to privacy as defined by the Privacy Act.
Look up any car based upon legal history, license plate, VIN, theft check, specs, and impound/towing events. Claims it's free but it really isn't. Has APIs for VIN decoding and license plate lookups.