Real map · Real units · Real events
Select an area, asset, or known location. WorldRuler is being designed to monitor connected data sources, detect defined anomalies, combine supporting evidence, and send a clear event brief.
A strategy-style interface for turning real-world signals into evidence-linked alerts.
Currently in development
Illustrative product vision
WorldRuler filters background noise, highlights meaningful changes, and cross-checks aviation and maritime tracking, airspace notices, thermal and imagery feeds, news and selected channels, and user-added evidence before producing a clear, actionable brief.
Map
The real world, continuously updated.
Units
Aircraft, vessels, bases, ports, and infrastructure.
Fog of war
Missing signals, uncertainty, and incomplete visibility.
Intel
Aviation and maritime tracking, airspace notices, thermal and imagery feeds, news and selected channels, scoring, alerts, and human-readable briefs.
Connected evidence
WorldRuler combines connected sources with user-added evidence. It does not claim to scan the entire internet or every public channel.
Military activity detected in monitored area
5 supporting indicators across 5 source types
Event confidence: HighObserved changes
Supporting sources
AI-assisted assessment · Interpretation
Increased military activity in the monitored area is supported by aviation and maritime tracking, airspace notices, news and selected channels, and user-added imagery observed within the same time window. The specific operation and objective have not yet been identified.
The public image is supporting context, not confirmation; the operational purpose remains an analytical assessment.
Rule-based score from aviation and maritime tracking, airspace notices, news and selected channels, user-added evidence, and cross-source correlation. The score reflects the observed activity; its operational purpose remains unassessed.
Government aircraft G-204 crossed the monitored border at 14:32 UTC. No matching public schedule or official announcement was found across monitored sources.
Possible unannounced government movement of diplomatic or security significance
Mission purpose is not publicly confirmed.
The border crossing is confirmed by tracking data; the significance of the movement is an analytical assessment.
NASA FIRMS detected a thermal hotspot inside the perimeter of a watchlisted military airbase, in the vicinity of the hangar area. No comparable detections were observed in the available recent baseline.
Possible fire or other significant heat event at the installation
FIRMS identifies hot pixels, not causes, and detections carry positional uncertainty. A fire, exercise activity, or a false detection remains possible until verified by imagery.
A FIRMS hotspot inside a monitored perimeter with no comparable detections in the available baseline. Cause: unverified.
Sanctions-listed tanker S-118 and vessel U-42 (identity unresolved): minimum separation 110 m, synchronized low-speed behavior for 47 minutes, and an AIS gap before rendezvous.
Strong behavioral match to a possible alongside rendezvous
Physical transfer is not yet confirmed by satellite or visual imagery.
The encounter combines close proximity, synchronized movement, an AIS gap, and sanctions exposure.
A specialized seismic vessel has begun a sustained survey pattern inside an offshore energy block west of Norway. Nearby discoveries and infrastructure are predominantly gas-related.
The activity may relate to oil exploration or monitoring of an existing field. Resource type and campaign purpose are not yet confirmed.
Why WorldRuler flagged it: vessel identity, movement pattern, operating duration, and regional context indicate active offshore seismic exploration.
Real OSINT case study
Manually discovered · designed to be automated by WorldRuler
apparent proximity on map → detailed track review → encounter hypothesis rejected → vessels screened individually → no sanctions match for first vessel → second vessel matched by IMO → OFAC sanctions record found → identity changes documented → visual hull evidence added
Built for teams that cannot afford to miss a signal
First wedge: monitor selected vessels, aircraft, and zones for sanctions, security, and unusual-movement events — then produce an evidence-backed alert and brief.
Monitor geopolitical, security, and strategic developments across selected regions.
Detect sanctions exposure, suspicious rendezvous, and unusual vessel behavior.
Identify port disruption, route changes, congestion, and supply-chain risk earlier.
Turn fragmented public signals into sourced, explainable investigations.
Initial MVP
Map, polygons, selected object, aircraft, vessel, and specialist-fleet watchlists, deterministic alerts, sanctions matching, NOTAM correlation, selected thermal feeds, selected geospatial context layers, basic movement-pattern detection, selected-source monitoring, user-added links and imagery, push notifications, and AI-generated briefs based on collected facts.
Not promised at launch
Universal internet scanning, automatic image geolocation, automatic satellite confirmation, scientifically calibrated probabilities, or fully autonomous attribution of military intent.
Current stage
Right now, WorldRuler is in analyst-led validation. We are running real-world cases through the workflows shown above — correlating selected sources, testing anomaly rules, and developing the scoring model — before automating them in the platform.
Advisory board
We are looking for experienced OSINT researchers, aviation and maritime specialists, defense and security analysts, energy-sector experts, and domain experts with practical detection methodologies. Selected advisors will help validate event logic, develop and review the scoring framework, and shape the first version of WorldRuler.
Selected advisors receive early access, direct influence on the roadmap, and public attribution — under their name or pseudonym. They may receive market-standard compensation reflecting their contribution and ongoing involvement.
Early access
We are talking to pilot partners, data providers, analysts, and early adopters now. If geospatial monitoring is part of your work — or your data could be part of ours — we would like to hear from you.