this post was submitted on 20 Jun 2026
153 points (78.0% liked)

Selfhosted

60281 readers
638 users here now

A place to share alternatives to popular online services that can be self-hosted without giving up privacy or locking you into a service you don't control.

Rules:

Detailed Rules Post

  1. Be civil.

  2. No spam.

  3. Posts are to be related to self-hosting.

  4. Don't duplicate the full text of your blog or readme if you're providing a link.

  5. Submission headline should match the article title.

  6. No trolling.

  7. Promotion posts require active participation, with an account that is at least 30 days old. F/LOSS without a paywall has exceptions, with requirements. See the rules link for details.

Resources:

Any issues on the community? Report it using the report flag.

Questions? DM the mods!

founded 3 years ago
MODERATORS
 

I've been building PRISM - a self-hosted OSINT toolkit you run yourself instead of pasting investigation targets into someone else's web service.

Give it a domain, IP, email, phone, or username and it runs 22+ modules in parallel into one dashboard: WHOIS, DNS, crt.sh subdomains, GeoIP, threat intel (Shodan/VirusTotal/AbuseIPDB/Censys), breach data, username search across 3000+ sites (Blackbird + Maigret), dark-web mirror checks, and more. Results come with an entity graph, a GeoIP map, an OPSEC exposure score (0โ€“100), and HTML/PDF/CSV/Markdown exports.

14 of the 22 modules work with zero API keys (missing keys degrade gracefully instead of erroring).

Stack: FastAPI + Next.js 14, runs with one docker compose up. MIT licensed.

Demo: https://getprism.su/ Github: https://github.com/NovaCode37/Prism-platform

Built it solo - feedback welcome, especially on which modules you'd want added.

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[โ€“] trulysoulless@lemmy.world 1 points 1 week ago

Thanks, gotcha. I figured marking those cases as inconclusive makes a lot more sense than treating them as failures. It should cut down on false alarms from catch-all and greylisted servers while still keeping the results reliable. Since I'm already checking MX, SPF, and DMARC, I should have enough confidence without being overly aggressive