# Open-source Intelligence (OSINT) Open-source intelligence (OSINT) is data collected from open source and publicly available sources. The following are a few OSINT resources and references: ## Passive Recon Tools: - [AMass](https://github.com/OWASP/Amass) - [Exiftool](https://www.sno.phy.queensu.ca/~phil/exiftool/) - [ExtractMetadata](http://www.extractmetadata.com) - [Findsubdomains](https://findsubdomains.com/) - [FOCA](https://elevenpaths.com) - [IntelTechniques](https://inteltechniques.com) - [Maltego](https://www.paterva.com/web7/) - [Recon-NG](https://github.com/lanmaster53/recon-ng) - [Scrapy](https://scrapy.org) - [Screaming Frog](https://www.screamingfrog.co.uk) - [Shodan](https://shodan.io) - [SpiderFoot](http://spiderfoot.net) - [theHarvester](https://github.com/laramies/theHarvester) - [Visual SEO Studio](https://visual-seo.com/) - [Web Data Extractor](http://www.webextractor.com) - [Xenu](http://home.snafu.de) - [ParamSpider](https://github.com/devanshbatham/ParamSpider) ## The OSINT Framework - [OSINT Framework](https://osintframework.com) ## Open Source Threat Intelligence - [GOSINT](https://github.com/ciscocsirt/gosint) - a project used for collecting, processing, and exporting high quality indicators of compromise (IOCs). GOSINT allows a security analyst to collect and standardize structured and unstructured threat intelligence. - [Awesome Threat Intelligence](https://github.com/santosomar/awesome-threat-intelligence) - A curated list of awesome Threat Intelligence resources. This is a great resource and I try to contribute to it. ## Active and Passive Reconnaissance Tips and Tools ### Passive Recon #### Website Exploration and "Google Hacking" * censys - https://censys.io * Spyse - https://spyse.com * netcraft - https://searchdns.netcraft.com * Google Hacking Database (GHDB) - https://www.exploit-db.com/google-hacking-database * ExifTool - https://www.sno.phy.queensu.ca/~phil/exiftool * Certficate Search - https://crt.sh/ * Huge TLS/SSL certificate DB with advanced search - https://certdb.com * Google Transparency Report - https://transparencyreport.google.com/https/certificates * SiteDigger - http://www.mcafee.com/us/downloads/free-tools/sitedigger.aspx ### IP address and DNS Lookup Tools - [bgp](https://bgp.he.net/) - [Bgpview](https://bgpview.io/) - [DataSploit (IP Address Modules)](https://github.com/DataSploit/datasploit/tree/master/ip) - [Domain Dossier](https://centralops.net/co/domaindossier.aspx) - [Domaintoipconverter](http://domaintoipconverter.com/) - [Googleapps Dig](https://toolbox.googleapps.com/apps/dig/) - [Hurricane Electric BGP Toolkit](https://bgp.he.net/) - [ICANN Whois](https://whois.icann.org/en) - [Massdns](https://github.com/blechschmidt/massdns) - [Mxtoolbox](https://mxtoolbox.com/BulkLookup.aspx) - [Ultratools ipv6Info](https://www.ultratools.com/tools/ipv6Info) - [Viewdns](https://viewdns.info/) - [Umbrella (OpenDNS) Popularity List](http://s3-us-west-1.amazonaws.com/umbrella-static/index.html) #### Social Media * A tool to scrape LinkedIn: https://github.com/dchrastil/TTSL * cree.py http://ilektrojohn.github.com/creepy #### Whois WHOIS information is based upon a tree hierarchy. ICANN (IANA) is the authoritative registry for all of the TLDs and is a great starting point for all manual WHOIS queries. * ICANN - http://www.icann.org * IANA - http://www.iana.com * NRO - http://www.nro.net * AFRINIC - http://www.afrinic.net * APNIC - http://www.apnic.net * ARIN - http://ws.arin.net * LACNIC - http://www.lacnic.net * RIPE - http://www.ripe.net ### BGP looking glasses * BGP4 - http://www.bgp4.as/looking-glasses * BPG6 - http://lg.he.net/ ### DNS * dnsenum - http://code.google.com/p/dnsenum * dnsmap - http://code.google.com/p/dnsmap * dnsrecon - http://www.darkoperator.com/tools-and-scripts * dnstracer - http://www.mavetju.org/unix/dnstracer.php * dnswalk - http://sourceforge.net/projects/dnswalk ## Dark Web OSINT Tools ### Dark Web Search Engine Tools - [Ahmia Search Engine](https://ahmia.fi) and [their GitHub repo](https://github.com/ahmia/ahmia-site) - [DarkSearch](https://darksearch.io) and their [GitHub repo](https://github.com/thehappydinoa/DarkSearch) - [Katana](https://github.com/adnane-X-tebbaa/Katana) - [OnionSearch](https://github.com/megadose/OnionSearch) - [Search Engines for Academic Research](https://www.itseducation.asia/deep-web.htm) - [DarkDump](https://github.com/josh0xA/darkdump) ### Tools to Obtain Information of .onion Links - [H-Indexer](http://jncyepk6zbnosf4p.onion/onions.html) - [Hunchly](https://www.hunch.ly/darkweb-osint) - [Tor66 Fresh Onions](http://tor66sewebgixwhcqfnp5inzp5x5uohhdy3kvtnyfxc2e5mxiuh34iid.onion/fresh) ### Tools to scan onion links - [Onioff](https://github.com/k4m4/onioff) - [Onion-nmap](https://github.com/milesrichardson/docker-onion-nmap) - [Onionscan](https://github.com/s-rah/onionscan) ### Tools to Crawl Dark Web Data - [TorBot](https://github.com/DedSecInside/TorBot) - [TorCrawl](https://github.com/MikeMeliz/TorCrawl.py) - [OnionIngestor](https://github.com/danieleperera/OnionIngestor) ### Other Great Intelligence Gathering Sources and Tools - Resources from Pentest-standard.org - http://www.pentest-standard.org/index.php/PTES_Technical_Guidelines#Intelligence_Gathering ### Active Recon - Tons of references to scanners and vulnerability management software for active reconnaissance - http://www.pentest-standard.org/index.php/PTES_Technical_Guidelines#Vulnerability_Analysis