The biggest change that many investigators have noticed as technology has evolved is how much work can be completed prior to any boots-on-the-ground investigation. In fact, Scout Security Group reports that they’ve reduced their investigators’ required time in the field by 63% by utilizing open sources prior to any field work, sometimes even eliminating the need for field investigation altogether while still meeting investigative goals and expectations.
The OSINT training courses featured in this guide will help you learn valuable OSINT investigative skills and develop your ability to conduct more efficient investigations and produce more defensible intelligence.
Open-source intelligence (OSINT) isn’t defined by the tools you’ve mastered or how many OSINT courses you’ve taken. Tools and training are valuable. But OSINT is only as good as your ability to follow a proven methodology for collecting, verifying, analyzing, and interpreting public data responsibly.
Training can help you gain the analytical mindset and tradecraft needed to develop that process. Tools can enable you to collect and analyze data more efficiently, but a tool itself will not produce intelligence. Only an analyst can do that.
Nico Dekens – aka “Dutch OSINT Guy”