− | '''DomainTools''' is a leading provider of [[Whois]] and other DNS profile data for threat intelligence enrichment.<ref>[http://investing.businessweek.com/research/stocks/private/snapshot.asp?privcapId=81947067 BusinessWeek.com]</ref> DomainTools data helps security analysts investigate malicious activity on their networks. Using IOCs (Indicators of Compromise), including domains and IPs, analysts can build a map of connected infrastructure. Those connections inform risk assessments, help profile attackers, guide online fraud investigations, and map cyber activity to attacker infrastructure. Fortune 1000 companies, global government agencies, and leading security solution vendors use the DomainTools platform as a critical ingredient in their threat investigation and mitigation work. | + | '''DomainTools''' is a leading provider of [[Whois]] and other DNS profile data for threat intelligence enrichment.<ref>[http://investing.businessweek.com/research/stocks/private/snapshot.asp?privcapId=81947067 BusinessWeek.com]</ref> It is a part of the [[Datacenter Group]] (DCL Group SA).<ref>[http://www.dclgroup.eu/ DCLGROUP | Home]</ref> DomainTools data helps security analysts investigate malicious activity on their networks. Using IOCs (Indicators of Compromise), including domains and IPs, analysts can build a map of connected infrastructure. Those connections inform risk assessments, help profile attackers, guide online fraud investigations, and map cyber activity to attacker infrastructure. Fortune 1000 companies, global government agencies, and leading security solution vendors use the DomainTools platform as a critical ingredient in their threat investigation and mitigation work. |
| DomainTools has over 10 billion related DNS data points to build a map of ‘who’s doing what’ on the Internet. Government agencies, Fortune 500 companies and leading security firms use our data as a critical ingredient in their threat investigation and cybercrime forensics work. | | DomainTools has over 10 billion related DNS data points to build a map of ‘who’s doing what’ on the Internet. Government agencies, Fortune 500 companies and leading security firms use our data as a critical ingredient in their threat investigation and cybercrime forensics work. |