Eyes Everywhere: The OSINT Revolution in Open Source Intelligence

Open Source Intelligence — OSINT — has gone from a niche hobby to a genuine geopolitical force. Eight episodes traced this transformation from multiple angles.

The Democratization of Spying

  • The End of Secrecy established the premise: commercial satellite imagery, publicly available flight data, ship transponder records, and social media geolocation have given ordinary people access to intelligence that was once the exclusive domain of state agencies. The Bellingcat model — civilian investigators using open data to expose military operations — has proven that OSINT can be as powerful as classified intelligence.

Tracking the Skies and Seas

  • Eyes in the Sky explained ADS-B, the transponder system that broadcasts aircraft position data. Every commercial flight is visible on platforms like FlightRadar24, but the interesting stories come from military aircraft that briefly appear and disappear, refueling tankers circling conflict zones, and surveillance planes maintaining orbit patterns.

  • Dark Ships covered the maritime equivalent: AIS transponder data that tracks ships globally. When vessels “go dark” by switching off transponders, it often signals sanctions evasion, illegal fishing, or military operations. The hosts explored how analysts use satellite imagery to fill the gaps.

  • Decoding the Sky revealed an overlooked OSINT source: NOTAMs (Notices to Air Missions). Temporary flight restrictions, GPS jamming warnings, and airspace closures often telegraph military operations hours or days before they become public knowledge.

AI-Powered Analysis

  • The Earth is Metadata showed how AI is supercharging OSINT. Models can now geolocate photos from vegetation patterns, shadow angles, and architectural styles. Combined with change detection on satellite imagery, analysts can monitor construction at military sites, track refugee movements, and verify conflict claims automatically.

Building Your Own Dashboard

  • DIY Geopolitical Intelligence was the hands-on episode. The hosts walked through building a personal intelligence dashboard using free tools: RSS feeds from conflict monitors, ADS-B and AIS tracking widgets, satellite imagery subscriptions, and automated alerts for regions of interest.

The OpSec Warning

  • Deterrence or Danger? and The Cost of a Click provided the counterpoint: if civilians can track military movements, soldiers posting on social media can compromise operations. The episodes explored how militaries are adapting to a world where operational security must account for everyone carrying a camera and a GPS receiver.

The OSINT series makes a compelling case: the era of information asymmetry in geopolitics is ending. The same tools that let governments spy on populations now let populations watch governments — and each other.

Episodes in this playlist

February 2026
#788 Dark Ships: The High-Stakes World of Maritime Tracking Discover how OSINT investigators use satellite radar and AIS data to track "dark" ships and massive aircraft carriers across the open ocean. Feb 22, 2026
#779 The Cost of a Click: Wartime OpSec in the Digital Age In the age of instant uploads, your viral video of a strike could be the enemy's best intelligence. Learn why silence is security in modern war. Feb 22, 2026
#706 DIY Geopolitical Intelligence: Building Your Dashboard Learn how to bridge the gap between elite intelligence tools and home-grown situational awareness dashboards using AI. Feb 19, 2026
#693 Decoding the Sky: How NOTAMs Telegraph Global Conflict Think aviation alerts are just technical jargon? Discover how NOTAMs have become the ultimate open-source tool for predicting modern warfare. Feb 18, 2026
#629 When Clouds Become Fingerprints Every pixel is a secret. Herman and Corn discuss how AI and OSINT are turning clouds and shadows into a global tracking system. Feb 14, 2026
January 2026
#328 When Hobbyists Track Doomsday Planes Ever wonder why military planes show up on public maps? Herman and Corn dive into the world of ADSB data and the democratization of intelligence. Jan 28, 2026
#292 Deterrence or Danger? Decoding the Signals of War Is it a bluff or a real threat? Corn and Herman dive into OSINT to reveal the hidden logistical signals that separate posturing from invasion. Jan 24, 2026
#207 The End of Secrecy: How OSINT is Redefining Intelligence Explore how hobbyists and satellites are revolutionizing intelligence, from tracking tanks on TikTok to high-res commercial space imagery. Jan 8, 2026