To resolve even more domains based on the IP address I utilised DNSlytics which allowed me to perform a reverse lookup based on the IPs found
DNSlytics -> https://t.co/AvkHzHrq04
If you want to look at how I use tools like @urlscanio , @DNSlytics@anyrun_app and how they can help your #OSINT investigations, then here is the answer: https://t.co/JB88LchBDJ
OSINT TIP #277⚙️
DNSlytics provides the ultimate online investigation tool. See detailed information about every IP address, domain name and provider.
🔗 https://t.co/RJHhYI0J9h
@DNSlytics#OSINT#infosecurity
You can now search for more Google Tags. The following tags are supported: AW-xxxx, DC-xxxx, G-xxxx, GTM-xxxx, PUB-xxxx and UA-xxxx. Example: https://t.co/Wv76yndlPQ
I really needed the full list for a #DNS reverse IP lookup and almost paid $49 for it from @DomainTools, then found @DNSlytics will give me all 88 domains for FREE - https://t.co/qHnyAYmMoC - Thank you!
@DNSlytics Find out everything about a domain name, IP address or provider. Discover relations between them and see historical data. https://t.co/st4r0XHtrX
@metasploit@rapid7 The world’s most used penetration testing framework https://t.co/dD91JNsnzp
#GIJNToolbox: We provide hands-on examples of how to use SpyOnWeb, DNSlytics, VirusTotal, & SpiderFoot HX to map out & analyze networks of websites while maintaining your privacy https://t.co/cavcd1FVWo @JaneLytv@CraigSilverman
When you want to see registered domains similar to yours, you can check dnslytics. This way you can see who is possibly creating a phishing domain.
>> https://t.co/Ew196XZZZu
Check other domains registered with the same IP, to see their activity.
#osint#dnslytics#phishing
In order to find possible #services run by the company, you can check its Google Analytics ID in #dnslytics, and find other #domains that use the same ID
➡️https://t.co/ULAsGxgUXO
#googleanalytics#osint
"If you’re trying to figure whether one website might be part of a larger network, DNSlytics might help you identify the person running it, or whether you’re dealing with a one-off site or not," suggests @CraigSilverman for investigating #disinformation https://t.co/n0ts1EqWCz
@TheAssurer@Google@ChromeDev@la2600 [2] The tab permission gives you the browser history message. Nothing changed on our site. We STILL only extract the hostname of the current URL. A lot of discussion is going about this topic, see https://t.co/NC5owxvqSe
@TheAssurer@Google@ChromeDev@la2600 Our extension used the activeTab permission to get the current URL. But a week ago our extension was removed by Google because the permission was too broad. We only got approval again after changing our extension to use the tab permission.