Anonymous ID: 46a0c0 Jan. 18, 2023, 8:35 p.m. No.18172542   πŸ—„οΈ.is πŸ”—kun   >>2605 >>2663 >>2753

Running a basic background check for a website.

  1. https://whois.domaintools.com / http://www.crimeflare.org:82 / https://www.findip-address.com / https://iphostinfo.com/cloudflare β€” IP or domain name information. The one in the middle gets through the CloudFlare defense. The last one will do the same and also provide a list of subdomains. https://whoisrequest.com/history/ will provide a history of changes made with the DNS records.

  2. tracert [IP/domain name] (Windows) or traceroute [IP/domain name] (Linux) β€” the path each packet takes to get to the destination.

  3. nslookup [IP/domain name] β€” DNS lookup.

  4. https://web.archive.org/ β€” old versions of the website.

  5. https://pentest-tools.com/website-vulnerability-scanning/discover-hidden-directories-and-files; DirBuster β€” open directories that may not have been mentioned anywhere on the website.

  6. nmap β€” port information for the server hosting a website.

  7. https://www.shodan.io/ β€” can be useful if used the right way.

  8. https://ubersuggest.io/ β€” use this to find sites/links regarding your search term.

  9. https://www.sixdegreesofwikipedia.com β€” find links quickly.

 

Running a basic background check for an entity or a person.

  1. https://opencorpdata.com/ β€” not much but at least something.

  2. The police department responsible for the jurisdiction in which the incident occurred/city in which the incident occurred =protocol for requesting and receiving police reports. Requires to deanonimize oneself.

  3. https://policereports.lexisnexis.com/search/ β€” Accident Reports.

  4. https://www.beenverified.com/ β€” background checks and public records. Costs money.

  5. https://www.mylife.com β€” what is the Internet's opinion about somebody. Similar principle as above.

  6. https://www.accurint.com/ β€” locate-and-research tool that will have to be paid for.

  7. http://www.data-trac.com/ β€” same as above.

  8. https://legal.thomsonreuters.com/en/products/clear-investigation-software β€” Thomson Reuter's research tool for journalists.

  9. https://www.pacer.gov/ β€” Public Access to Court Electronic Records.

  10. https://www.canlii.org β€” same but Canadian. Some features cost money.

  11. https://www.fbi.gov/services/cjis/nics β€” FBI's National Instant Criminal Background Check System. Requires to deanonimize oneself. Includes mental health and criminal entries.

  12. Try to google "Department of Finance notice of [property] value", some cities/states have information on the Web about this.

  13. Check for official statements on https://www.justice.gov/ and https://www.house.gov/.

  14. https://www.courtlistener.com β€” database of legal opinions from courts.

  15. https://www.sec.gov/ β€” US Securities and Exchange Commission.

  16. https://issuu.com, https://www.newspapers.com β€” people publish magazines and other printed stuff here.

  17. https://beta.companieshouse.gov.uk, https://opengovuk.com/ β€” similar to OpenCorpData.

  18. https://www.courtlistener.com/ β€” find court cases.

 

https://mega.nz/#F!DwNkwAZQ!xa6JLeW9_632P0yw3MhlNw

Eggman Island photo dump

 

https://www.einvestigator.com/background-checks-and-investigations/