Updated OSINT VM

We just pushed several updates to the OSINT VM thanks to @jknsec:

Updated linux.txt and install.sh to reflect changes within several applications.
Modified user.sh to reflect change with Maigret.
We highly recommend building a new VM to take advantage of the modifications, which bring back full function to several dead applications. Log into the OSINT portal from the book to see everything.
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Upcoming OSINT Live Courses

Almost all of our live and virtual training sessions are conducted privately for a specific group or agency. This allows us to customize the content for your needs. On rare occasion, we participate in a course with open enrollment. For the first time in years, we have two upcoming courses open to the public:

April 25-26, 2026: LEIU/IALEIA Conference, Orlando, Florida
August 3-4, 2026: BlackHat, Las Vegas, Nevada

The 2-day LEIU/IALEIA course starts at only $650, which is the lowest price we have ever offered for a 2-day course. We will be providing new OSINT instruction at both events and the links above provide enrollment details.

80Gpbs Drive Enclosures

In Issue 011 of UNREDACTED Magazine, I devoted an article to the importance of drive specifications in regard to the disk speed which can be achieved. The purpose of the article was two-fold. I wanted to explain how important protocols were, such as Thunderbolt 3/4/5, USB 2/3.2 Gen 2/3.2 Gen 2x2/4, PCIe Gen 2/3/4/5, and SATA I/II/II, when we considered drives for our daily use, but I also wanted to be sure people were not wasting their money on the latest speed marketing if their devices did not support those promises. The focus of the article was on 40Gbps NVMe drive enclosures which were reliable delivering 3,000 MB/s in real-world use, which is quite impressive for an external drive. In that article, I briefly stated that the only way we could do better was with 80Gbps enclosures and ports which supported those speeds. The response was immediate. Readers wanted to know how to get more speed from large external drives.

In that article, I found that the Qwiizlab 40Gbps USB4 enclosure (https://amzn.to/3OgrIub) performed better than more expensive competitors, so I went back to that company to test their 80Gbps option (https://amzn.to/3Nj3zD2). I inserted the same 4 TB Samsung 990 Pro NVMe drive (https://amzn.to/4qwf7Ar) into the new enclosure and began my tests. The following displays the device next to a Mac Studio computer.

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I first tried it on my aging MacBook Pro M1 Pro which only has Thunderbolt 4 ports. As expected, I achieved results similar to the tests with the 40Gbps enclosure within the magazine. This is because port specifications matter. That computer simply does not have ports capable of taking advantage of an enclosure offering 80Gbps. For that computer, a less expensive enclosure and drive would work almost as well. However, this was a much different story when connected to a more modern computer.

I found the fastest computer in the office, a Mac Studio with a M4 Max chip and Thunderbolt 5 ports. First, I tested the internal 2TB drive for reference:

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This was standard for the large drive and Max chip. This gives me blazing fast access to large chunks of data on the internal drive. Next, I tested the external 80Gbps enclosure:

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I was shocked. I was getting faster speeds from an external, non-apple, drive than the overpriced Apple drive soldered onto the motherboard. I was skeptical at first, but larger data speed test were just as fast. I pivoted to my real-world test. I copied a 250 GB database from the internal drive to the external:

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There were no pauses or signs of throttling. In less than a minute, I copied over this huge database which would have taken 30 minutes on a portable USB disk. The device did get warm, but never hot. There is no fan, so it is important to attach the included thermal pad to the drive as explained in the manual.

The catch: price. Like any other technology, the latest advancements will cost more than the previous generation. I once paid $500 for a 1TB, dual 3.5" SATA disk array many years ago. It was slow but offered unbelievable storage at the time. I now pay less than $100 for a 1 TB microSD card which is tiny and faster. Expect to pay just under $200 for an 80Gbps enclosure while the 40Gbps options will be less than $70. I suspect we will see these prices eventually drop, but it may be a while before we see 120Gbps drives emerge. We will need faster NVMe options before than can be a possibility, but I am thrilled with 7,000 MB/s in real-word use.

Who is this for? Only people who have the need for the speed. If you have a computer with ports capable of 80Gbps or higher, then you might be justified in this upgrade. Since I move huge databases around often, I am now hooked on this enclosure. I was able to offload a terabyte of data from my internal drive to the external in approximately two minutes. It seems too good to be true.

I will repeat myself from the magazine article. My first hard drive was a 5400 RPM spinning disk which achieved 100 MB/s. The later 7200 RPM drives achieved 130 MB/s and the rich people who had SCSI drives were getting 150 MB/s. When I had an early SSD offering 480 MB/s , I was confident that was the end. I never imagined that we would get over 30x those speeds on solid-state medium back then. I often remind myself of this when I start looking at the latest gadgets. We are truly spoiled.

Disclosures: I am not affiliated with any companies mentioned within this article. I was not paid or asked to write this article. I receive commissions through Amazon affiliate links, but not directly from any of
these companies.

UNREDACTED Magazine 011

Issue #011 is now available (18 Articles - 77 Pages) by the IntelTechniques team for $10!

https://unredactedmagazine.com

https://payhip.com/b/6teIq

Contents:

Better Browsers with Bookmarklets: Increase Your Daily Online Productivity
Application Firewalls vs. DNS Filtering: Control ALL Hidden Connections
Browser Fingerprint Dilemmas: What Matters and What Doesn't
When Cellular Carriers Fail: Be Prepared for the Next Outage
Updated Residential, CMRA & PO Box Strategies: Responding to New Enforcement
Control Email with Sieve Filters: Don’t Just Block, Reject
Recording All VoIP Calls: Hold Companies Accountable & Save Money
A.I. Disinformation Poisoning Results: The Unintended Benefits of Online Lies
Next-Level Disinformation: Forcing Data into The Consumer Stream
Proton VPN OpenVPN Changes: Update Your Firewall Certs Today
My Complete Private Network: Combining pfSense and OpenWRT Start to Finish
P2P 2FA: Explaining Our Full Protocols
Offline Dictation Revisited: Voice to Text Without Eavesdropping
The Pop!_OS 24.04 LTS Conundrum: Should I Stay or Should I Go?
Pop!_OS 24 ARM VMs: Finally, We Can Run Pop on Apple Silicon
Drive Specifications Matter: Choose Your Connection Wisely
Bypassing X Login with XCancel: No Need for Sock Puppets
Q&A

77 pages of raw info.
No third-party ads.
No outside sponsors.
No conflicts of interest.
No fluff. No filler.
No agenda.
Only detailed information.

We anticipate #012 will be released in Summer of 2026.

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Video Training Final Price Increase

When Jason took over the online OSINT video training, we offered a very low price to those willing to take the leap with us. Since then, the training has grown to over 120 hours of high-quality video content and a 1,000 page training guide. We gradually increased the fees over the last five years to match the growing content, and have always promised we would keep the price for both training and a certification under $1000. On March 1, 2026, we will apply our final fee increase to get us to that target price. The training will go up to $699 and the OSIP Certification will stay at $300. We will keep our promise and maintain that price from then on. If you would like to get in at the $649 rate, be sure to sign up before March 1, 2026!

https://www.inteltechniques.net/

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