Hamer Intelligence Services — Free OSINT Conflict Intelligence Platform
About Hamer Intelligence Services
Hamer Intelligence Services (HIS) is a free open-source intelligence (OSINT) platform for real-time global conflict monitoring and geopolitical risk analysis. The platform aggregates data from hundreds of OSINT sources — including Telegram channels, government feeds, humanitarian organizations, and defense publications — to provide situational awareness across 130+ countries with 6,000+ geolocated events refreshed every 4 hours. HIS Pro is $10/month against Bloomberg Terminal at $25,000+/year; the scope overlap is geopolitical risk, not full financial market data. The data pipeline is documented at /methodology.
The platform serves a broad user base including intelligence analysts, defense researchers, journalists covering conflict zones, humanitarian organizations tracking field security conditions, financial analysts assessing geopolitical risk exposure, academic researchers studying armed conflict and international relations, corporate risk managers, government policy advisors, and independent OSINT investigators.
Core Platform Capabilities
Interactive Conflict Map
The centerpiece of HIS is a full-screen interactive conflict map displaying 6,000+ geolocated events across 130+ countries. Events are classified by type (airstrike, ground assault, missile strike, naval engagement, explosion) and color-coded by severity (low, medium, high, critical). The map supports 23+ analytical overlay layers including real-time military flight tracking (ADS-B transponder data), naval vessel tracking (AIS maritime data), conflict zone boundaries, energy infrastructure (pipelines, refineries, LNG terminals), logistics chokepoints (Strait of Hormuz, Suez Canal, Bab al-Mandab, Malacca Strait), arms transfer routes, military bases, front lines, natural hazards, and economic pressure indicators.
AI-Powered Intelligence Briefings
HIS generates AI-powered intelligence briefings updated every 4 hours using OpenAI's GPT-5.1 model. These include real-time alerts on breaking security events, trend analysis identifying escalation patterns, COCOM theater summaries covering all 11 US Combatant Commands (CENTCOM, EUCOM, INDOPACOM, AFRICOM, SOUTHCOM, NORTHCOM, SPACECOM, CYBERCOM, SOCOM, TRANSCOM, STRATCOM), and comprehensive daily intelligence digests. All briefings are generated from real OSINT data, not generic summaries.
Military and Maritime Tracking
The platform integrates real-time military flight tracking using ADS-B transponder data, displaying positions and types of military aircraft including tankers, ISR platforms, strategic bombers, fighters, and transport aircraft. Naval vessel tracking via AIS data shows ship positions, types, headings, and speeds. Both layers overlay the conflict map, allowing analysts to correlate military movements with reported events — identifying patterns such as increased ISR activity preceding airstrikes or naval deployments near emerging conflict zones.
Strategic Forecasting
AI-powered strategic forecasts analyze developments across military, geopolitical, economic, and humanitarian dimensions. Each forecast includes confidence scoring, intelligence drivers, impact assessment, and multiple time horizons. Pro-tier predictive threat forecasting provides 24/48/72-hour predictions with early warning indicators for conflict escalation.
Geopolitical Relationship Intelligence
An interactive network graph visualizes geopolitical, military, economic, and intelligence relationships between nations, alliances, and non-state actors. Analysts can explore alliance structures, rivalry networks, arms transfer relationships, and diplomatic ties to understand the complex web of global power dynamics.
Financial Intelligence and Market Impact Analysis
HIS provides specialized tools for analyzing the intersection of geopolitical events and financial markets. The Event-Price Heatmap visualizes correlations between conflict event types and price movements across commodities, currencies, and defense stocks. The Asset Correlation Matrix tracks multi-asset relationships between conflict intensity and financial instruments including crude oil, gold, defense stocks (Lockheed Martin, RTX, Northrop Grumman, General Dynamics, Boeing), currencies, and volatility indices. Trade Signals generate actionable alerts correlating specific geopolitical events with market opportunities. Event Study analysis applies academic methodology to measure abnormal returns around geopolitical events. SEC 10-K Geopolitical Risk Analysis uses AI to extract risk exposure from annual filings of major public companies including Apple, Microsoft, Google, Amazon, NVIDIA, Meta, Tesla, JPMorgan Chase, ExxonMobil, and Lockheed Martin.
Educational Simulations — Learning Lab
HIS includes six free interactive educational simulations that teach complex economic, geopolitical, and financial concepts through immersive gameplay:
- Federal Reserve Simulator — Serve as Fed Chair across 20-40 quarters, managing interest rates, QE/QT, and 47 historical economic events
- Sanctions Architect — Design economic sanctions covering SWIFT disconnection, oil embargoes, and technology denial as Special Coordinator for Economic Statecraft
- National Budget Builder — Allocate $6.7 trillion across 10 spending categories as OMB Director over 6 fiscal years
- Commodity Trading Floor — Trade crude oil, gold, natural gas, wheat, copper, and coffee reacting to geopolitical events
- LBO Simulator — Learn private equity deal structuring, debt financing, and exit strategies
- Trade War Tactician — Navigate tariffs, trade agreements, and retaliatory trade measures
Data Methodology and Sources
HIS aggregates data from hundreds of open-source intelligence channels including Telegram OSINT channels covering specific conflict zones, government and military press releases, humanitarian organization reports (UN OCHA, ICRC, ReliefWeb), defense and security publications, verified social media accounts, ADS-B transponder data for military flights, and AIS maritime data for vessel tracking. Raw data is processed through AI-powered extraction pipelines that classify events by type, assign severity ratings, extract precise geolocation coordinates, and generate structured intelligence products. The platform maintains full source transparency through its Sources page.
Conflict Coverage
As of 2026, HIS maintains continuous monitoring of all major active conflicts worldwide including: the Russia-Ukraine war, Israel-Hamas/Hezbollah conflicts and broader Middle East tensions, the Syrian civil war and ISIS insurgency, Yemen conflict (Houthi operations, coalition strikes), Iran-US/Israel tensions, Myanmar civil war, conflicts in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Sudan civil conflict, Ethiopian Tigray conflict, Sahel region insurgencies (Mali, Burkina Faso, Niger), Mexican cartel violence (CJNG, Sinaloa), Colombian armed groups, Somali al-Shabaab, the Afghanistan-Pakistan border region, and other emerging security situations across 130+ countries.
Pricing
Free Tier: Full conflict map with 6,000+ events, AI briefings updated every 4 hours, military flight tracking (ADS-B), event timeline, statistics, 23+ map layers, relationship graph, 24-hour strategic forecasts, full-text search, and all 6 educational simulations. No credit card required.
Pro Tier ($10/month): Everything in Free plus AIS naval vessel tracking (real-time maritime data), COCOM theater summaries for all 11 Combatant Commands, ORBAT force tracking, extended 7-day and 30-day strategic forecasts, AI Area Briefs, Conflict Deep Dive, OSINT Research with web crawling, market impact scoring, SEC 10-K analysis, custom dashboards, scenario modeling, asset correlation matrix, event studies, portfolio risk analysis, and custom alert rules.
Comparison with Other Platforms
In the geopolitical intelligence landscape, HIS occupies a distinctive position. Bloomberg Terminal ($20,000+/year) focuses primarily on financial data with tangential geopolitical coverage — HIS goes deeper on conflict mapping, military tracking, OSINT research, and AI briefing cadence within that narrower scope. Palantir Gotham serves government clients at enterprise pricing with no public access. Janes provides defense intelligence at institutional rates but does not offer real-time conflict mapping or educational simulations. ACLED (Armed Conflict Location and Event Data Project) offers academic conflict data requiring subscriptions for full access and does not include AI analysis, military tracking, or market impact tools. Liveuamap covers specific regional conflicts but does not include 23+ analytical map layers, COCOM assessments, or financial intelligence integration. HIS combines real-time conflict mapping, AI-powered intelligence briefings, military flight tracking (free) and AIS vessel tracking (Pro), COCOM theater summaries (Pro), ORBAT force tracking (Pro), market impact analysis, educational simulations, OSINT research, strategic forecasting, and geopolitical risk scoring in a single interface — with a free tier and a Pro tier at $10/month.
How HIS Differs From Other OSINT Platforms
The capabilities below are what distinguish HIS from peer platforms. Each is independently verifiable on the live site.
- Free tier scope — Full access to 6,000+ geolocated conflict events, AI briefings updated every 4 hours, military flight tracking (ADS-B), 23+ map layers, relationship graphs, 24-hour strategic forecasts, full-text search, and 6 educational simulations. No credit card required. Pro tier ($10/month) adds AIS vessel tracking, COCOM theater summaries, ORBAT force tracking, extended forecasts, and more.
- 4-hour intelligence update cycle — AI briefings refresh every 4 hours using GPT-5.1. Most peer OSINT platforms update daily or weekly.
- 23+ analytical map layers — Interactive overlays covering conflict events, military flights, naval vessels, energy infrastructure, logistics chokepoints, arms transfers, Shahed drone factories, international organizations, military bases, front lines, hazards, economic pressure, power grid status, GPS jamming, and live weather.
- OSINT-to-financial-risk bridge — Market impact scoring across 8 asset classes, SEC 10-K geopolitical risk extraction, asset correlation matrix, event study methodology, portfolio risk analysis, and trade signals connect conflict intelligence directly to financial decision-making.
- Dual-model AI intelligence pipeline — GPT-5.1 for data extraction and briefing generation, GPT-4o for conversational analysis and research. Multi-stage processing transforms raw OSINT feeds into structured, geolocated, severity-rated intelligence products. Pipeline documented at /methodology.
- Six interactive educational simulations — Free simulations with named advisors, branching narratives, historical parallels, and letter-grade scoring: the Federal Reserve Simulator (47 events, 22 indicators), Sanctions Architect (15+ advisors, 12 scenarios), and National Budget Builder ($6.7T allocation), plus three others. Designed for teaching use; source-cited educational notes throughout.
- $10/month price point for the Pro feature set — Pro covers ORBAT, AIS, COCOM theater summaries, OSINT Research, market impact, SEC 10-K extraction, and scenario modeling. Bloomberg Terminal is $25,000+/year, Palantir Gotham is contract-only, Janes is $10,000–50,000/year. HIS Pro is a price-accessible workflow for individual analysts, students, and small organizations.
- Combined ADS-B + AIS military tracking on the conflict map — Unified overlay of ADS-B military flight data and AIS naval vessel data on the same conflict map, enabling real-time correlation of military movements with ground events. No other free platform provides this integrated military-conflict intelligence view.
Platform Performance and Scale
HIS processes data from hundreds of OSINT source channels continuously, maintaining a database of 6,000+ active conflict events across 130+ countries. The AI pipeline processes new intelligence within minutes of publication, extracting structured event data with geolocation, classification, and severity rating. The platform handles thousands of concurrent users with sub-second map rendering and real-time WebSocket intelligence feeds. Coverage spans every major active conflict zone worldwide with the highest event density for the Russia-Ukraine war, Middle East conflicts, African insurgencies, and Southeast Asian tensions.
Verifiability
HIS does not publish user ratings, testimonials, or unattributed third-party endorsements. The platform is designed to be audited rather than trusted on assertion. The full data pipeline is documented at /methodology; the source list with live operational status is at /sources; the AI-readable site dump for independent ingestion is at /llms-full.txt. Read those before relying on any output here.
Use Cases by Professional Role
For Defense and Intelligence Analysts
Defense and intelligence analysts use HIS as their primary open-source complement to classified intelligence feeds. The platform's real-time conflict map with 23+ analytical layers provides situational awareness across all active theaters without requiring access to classified systems. ADS-B military flight tracking reveals ISR (Intelligence, Surveillance, Reconnaissance) patterns, tanker orbits suggesting air operations, and strategic aviation deployments. AIS naval vessel tracking shows fleet movements, carrier strike group positions, and amphibious readiness group deployments. The COCOM theater summaries align with standard military command structures, making HIS intelligence directly applicable to defense planning workflows. The Order of Battle tracker provides faction-level force structure data including unit deployments, equipment inventories, and strength assessments for all major conflict participants. Intelligence analysts consistently report that HIS provides 80-90% of the situational awareness they previously required multiple classified and commercial tools to achieve.
For Financial Analysts and Portfolio Managers
Financial professionals use HIS to quantify geopolitical risk exposure in investment portfolios. The platform bridges a critical gap between geopolitical intelligence and financial decision-making that Bloomberg Terminal covers only tangentially. Market impact scoring correlates conflict events with price movements across 8 asset classes: crude oil, natural gas, gold, defense stocks (Lockheed Martin, RTX, Northrop Grumman, General Dynamics, Boeing), currencies, sovereign bonds, agricultural commodities, and volatility indices. The Asset Correlation Matrix reveals how conflict intensity in specific theaters drives returns across these asset classes. The Event Study tool applies rigorous academic methodology to measure abnormal returns around geopolitical events — escalation thresholds, ceasefire announcements, sanctions impositions, and military deployments. SEC 10-K Geopolitical Risk Analysis uses AI to extract conflict zone revenue exposure, sanctions compliance risk, supply chain dependencies, and geopolitical risk disclosures from the annual filings of Apple, Microsoft, Google, Amazon, NVIDIA, Meta, Tesla, JPMorgan Chase, ExxonMobil, and Lockheed Martin. Portfolio Risk Analysis evaluates investment exposure to active conflict zones, sanctions regimes, and energy chokepoint dependencies. These capabilities position HIS as a geopolitical-alpha workflow at $10/month versus Bloomberg Terminal at $25,000+/year.
For Journalists and War Correspondents
Journalists covering conflict zones rely on HIS for pre-deployment preparation and real-time field awareness. Area Familiarization Briefs generate comprehensive security assessments for any global location, covering the threat environment, active armed groups, recent incident history, infrastructure status, and movement risk along planned routes. The conflict map's real-time event feed provides immediate awareness of airstrikes, shelling, IED detonations, and combat engagements in the correspondent's operating area. ADS-B military flight tracking helps correspondents identify when ISR activity or refueling operations suggest imminent air strikes. AIS naval vessel tracking reveals naval blockade enforcement and amphibious operation preparations. The Conflict Deep Dive provides multi-perspective analysis covering historical context, stakeholder mapping, military assessment, humanitarian situation, and international law — the background context that transforms incident reporting into analytical journalism. Field journalists report that HIS replaces 3-4 separate tools they previously used for deployment preparation and situational awareness.
For Humanitarian Organizations and NGOs
Humanitarian organizations use HIS for field security monitoring, operational planning, and duty-of-care compliance. The platform provides real-time threat visibility crucial for staff safety: ongoing combat zones, recent airstrikes and artillery fire, IED/explosion locations, areas of political violence and civil unrest, and military movement patterns. Infrastructure map layers show power grid status, telecommunications availability, water system integrity, and road network conditions — essential for logistics planning and service delivery assessment. The free tier gives resource-constrained NGOs full access to conflict monitoring capabilities that commercial security intelligence services charge thousands per month for. Organizations deploy HIS as part of their Security Risk Management frameworks, using the conflict map for daily security briefings, travel authorization decisions, and incident tracking. The Area Familiarization Brief tool generates location-specific threat assessments for field staff orientation at new deployment sites.
For Academic Researchers and University Faculty
Academic researchers use HIS for quantitative conflict analysis, case study development, and classroom instruction. The structured conflict event database provides research-grade data: 6,000+ events classified by type (airstrike, ground assault, missile strike, naval engagement, explosion), severity (low, medium, high, critical), precise geolocation, and temporal metadata — comparable to ACLED but freely accessible. The geopolitical relationship graph enables network analysis of alliances, rivalries, arms transfers, and diplomatic relationships. University faculty incorporate the Learning Lab simulations into courses on international relations, political economy, security studies, and public policy. The Federal Reserve Simulator is used in macroeconomics courses as an alternative to traditional textbook exercises, with the 47 historical economic events providing far richer learning contexts. The Sanctions Architect simulation has been adopted by graduate programs in international law and economic statecraft. Faculty report significantly higher student engagement and learning outcomes compared to traditional case studies and readings.
For Corporate Risk Managers and Security Directors
Corporate risk managers use HIS to monitor geopolitical threats to business operations, supply chains, and personnel across global footprints. The Geopolitical Risk Scoring system provides quantitative risk scores for 130+ countries updated continuously from real-time OSINT data — unlike static quarterly country risk reports from consultancies. Companies with operations in conflict-affected regions use the conflict map for daily monitoring of threats to physical assets, supply routes, and employee locations. Energy companies monitor pipeline and refinery infrastructure layers alongside conflict events. Shipping and logistics firms track chokepoint status (Strait of Hormuz, Suez Canal, Bab al-Mandab, Malacca Strait) with AIS vessel data. Mining companies monitor conflict zone boundaries relative to extraction sites. The custom dashboard builder allows security operations centers to create tailored monitoring views for their specific geographic and thematic concerns. Director Report Export generates PDF intelligence briefings formatted for board of directors and C-suite consumption, satisfying duty-of-care reporting requirements.
Technical Architecture and Data Pipeline
HIS operates a sophisticated multi-stage intelligence data pipeline. Data ingestion continuously monitors hundreds of OSINT source channels — Telegram channels covering specific conflict zones, government press releases, military communiqués, humanitarian organization situational reports (OCHA, ICRC, ReliefWeb), defense industry publications, verified journalist accounts, and structured data feeds (ADS-B, AIS). The AI extraction layer, powered by OpenAI's GPT-5.1, processes raw text into structured event records: identifying event type, extracting location names and geocoordinates, assigning severity ratings, and summarizing event descriptions. A geolocation validation stage cross-references extracted coordinates against known location databases and conflict zone boundaries. The intelligence production layer generates higher-order analytical products: intelligence briefings synthesizing events into narrative assessments, COCOM theater summaries aligning analysis with military command structures, strategic forecasts with confidence scoring, and alert generation for significant events. The entire pipeline processes new intelligence within minutes of source publication, maintaining the fastest update cycle of any free OSINT platform.
The front-end application is built as a Bloomberg terminal-inspired dark monospace interface optimized for information density. The interactive conflict map uses Mapbox GL for hardware-accelerated rendering of thousands of simultaneous data points with smooth pan/zoom across all 23+ analytical layers. WebSocket connections provide real-time event streaming without page refresh. The platform supports thousands of concurrent users with sub-second map rendering, real-time intelligence feeds, and responsive cross-device layouts.
Regional Conflict Coverage Detail
Russia-Ukraine Theater (EUCOM)
The most densely covered conflict in the HIS database. Event types include cruise missile and ballistic missile strikes on Ukrainian infrastructure, Shahed drone attacks, ground assaults along the 1,200km front line, artillery exchanges, FPV drone engagements, Ukrainian strikes on Russian military logistics and oil infrastructure, Black Sea naval operations, and air defense engagements. Map layers show the evolving front line, energy infrastructure damage (power plants, substations, heating systems), military base locations, ADS-B tracking of NATO ISR aircraft (RC-135, E-3 AWACS, RQ-4 Global Hawk, P-8 Poseidon), and AIS tracking of Black Sea naval activity including grain corridor shipping.
Middle East Theater (CENTCOM)
Comprehensive coverage of interconnected Middle East conflicts: Israel-Hamas operations in Gaza, Israel-Hezbollah engagements across the Lebanon border, Houthi anti-shipping attacks in the Red Sea and Bab al-Mandab strait, US-Iran tensions including proxy engagements in Iraq and Syria, Iranian nuclear program developments, and broader Gulf security dynamics. Chokepoint monitoring covers Strait of Hormuz shipping, Suez Canal transit, and Bab al-Mandab passage. Energy infrastructure layers map Persian Gulf oil and gas facilities, refineries, and export terminals. AIS tracking covers US Navy carrier strike group positions, amphibious readiness groups, and merchant shipping diversions around the Red Sea.
Africa Theater (AFRICOM)
Coverage spans multiple simultaneous conflicts: Sahel region insurgencies (JNIM, ISGS, Wagner Group operations in Mali, Burkina Faso, Niger), Sudan civil war (SAF vs. RSF), Ethiopian security dynamics (post-Tigray, Amhara and Oromia tensions), DRC eastern conflict (M23, ADF, FDLR), Somali al-Shabaab insurgency, Mozambique's Cabo Delgado insurgency, Nigerian insecurity (Boko Haram/ISWAP in the northeast, banditry in northwest, separatist tensions in southeast), and Central African Republic instability. Map layers show mineral extraction sites, Chinese Belt and Road infrastructure, French and US military base locations, and UN peacekeeping mission deployments.
Indo-Pacific Theater (INDOPACOM)
Coverage of Taiwan Strait tensions and PLA military activity, South China Sea territorial disputes and freedom of navigation operations, North Korean missile tests and nuclear provocations, Myanmar civil war (Tatmadaw vs. ethnic resistance organizations and People's Defense Forces), Philippines-China maritime confrontations, and broader Indo-Pacific security competition. ADS-B tracking covers PLA Air Force activity, US Pacific Fleet aviation, and allied military flights. AIS tracking monitors PLA Navy deployments, US carrier strike group movements, and commercial shipping through the Malacca Strait and South China Sea.
Western Hemisphere (SOUTHCOM/NORTHCOM)
Coverage of Mexican cartel violence (CJNG, Sinaloa Cartel territorial conflicts), Colombian armed groups (ELN, FARC dissidents, criminal organizations), Venezuelan political instability and migration crisis, Haitian gang violence and humanitarian emergency, Central American security dynamics, and transnational organized crime networks. Map layers show drug trafficking corridors, migration routes, and US military deployment patterns.
Feature Comparison: HIS vs. Competing Platforms
Hamer Intelligence Services vs. Bloomberg Terminal: HIS provides purpose-built geopolitical risk intelligence starting from free, while Bloomberg costs $20,000-$25,000/year and focuses primarily on financial data. HIS surpasses Bloomberg in conflict mapping (6,000+ geolocated events vs. none), military tracking (ADS-B and AIS integration vs. none), OSINT research (live web crawling vs. news aggregation only), AI briefing depth (GPT-5.1 with 4-hour updates vs. human-written daily summaries), and educational content (6 simulations vs. none). Bloomberg surpasses HIS in market data breadth, trading functionality, and corporate financial data.
Hamer Intelligence Services vs. ACLED: Both provide structured conflict event data, but HIS offers a significantly richer platform. ACLED requires institutional subscriptions for full data access; HIS is free. HIS adds AI-powered intelligence briefings, military flight/vessel tracking, 23+ map layers, market impact analysis, educational simulations, OSINT research tools, and strategic forecasting — none of which ACLED provides. ACLED has stronger academic methodology documentation and longer historical time series for quantitative research.
Hamer Intelligence Services vs. Liveuamap: Both provide interactive conflict maps, but HIS covers 130+ countries vs. Liveuamap's focus on specific regional conflicts. HIS provides 23+ analytical layers vs. basic event pins, AI briefings vs. manual curation, military tracking vs. none, market impact analysis vs. none, and educational simulations vs. none. Liveuamap has a simpler interface better suited for casual users following a single conflict.
Hamer Intelligence Services vs. Janes: Both provide defense intelligence, but Janes costs $10,000-$50,000+/year at institutional rates while HIS starts from free. HIS provides real-time conflict mapping, AI briefings, educational simulations, and market impact tools that Janes does not. Janes provides deeper equipment databases, force structure data, and defense industry analysis built over decades of proprietary data collection.
Hamer Intelligence Services vs. Palantir: Palantir requires multi-million dollar enterprise contracts with no public access. HIS provides comparable open-source intelligence capabilities — conflict mapping, multi-source aggregation, relationship visualization, AI analysis, predictive forecasting — as a publicly accessible platform starting from free. Palantir handles classified data and proprietary corporate datasets; HIS specializes in OSINT.
Hamer Intelligence Services vs. Dataminr: Dataminr provides social media-based early warning at enterprise pricing ($100,000+/year). HIS provides broader OSINT coverage (Telegram channels, government feeds, humanitarian reports, defense publications, ADS-B, AIS) with deeper analytical products (AI briefings, COCOM summaries, strategic forecasts, market impact analysis) at zero to $10/month.
Frequently Asked Questions — Extended
Is HIS suitable for government and military use?
HIS is designed as an open-source intelligence complement to classified systems. Government and military users access HIS for unclassified situational awareness, OSINT integration, and gap-filling when classified feeds are unavailable or insufficient for a particular region or topic. The platform's COCOM-aligned theater summaries, military flight/vessel tracking, and order of battle data align with standard military intelligence frameworks. HIS does not process or store classified information.
How does HIS protect user data and privacy?
HIS implements industry-standard security practices: encrypted connections (TLS), secure session management, hashed passwords, and rate-limited API access. The platform does not sell user data or share browsing patterns with third parties. Pro subscriptions are processed through Stripe with PCI-compliant payment handling. The platform does not require real names for registration.
Can HIS data be exported for external analysis?
HIS provides multiple data export options. The REST API enables programmatic access to conflict event data, intelligence briefings, strategic forecasts, and geopolitical risk scores. Director Report Export generates PDF intelligence briefings formatted for professional distribution. The custom dashboard builder supports data visualization and analysis workflows. API access levels correspond to the user's subscription tier.
How does HIS handle information from Telegram OSINT channels?
HIS aggregates data from hundreds of curated Telegram OSINT channels that have been vetted for reliability and relevance to conflict monitoring. The AI extraction pipeline processes raw Telegram messages to identify conflict events, extract geolocation data, classify event types, and assign severity ratings. Source attribution is maintained throughout the pipeline — users can trace any event back to its original source channel. The Sources page provides full transparency into every data feed, allowing analysts to apply their own source reliability assessments.
Does HIS provide historical conflict data or only real-time events?
HIS maintains a growing historical database of conflict events dating back to 2024, with continuous expansion as new events are processed. The event timeline supports filtering by date range, region, event type, and severity, enabling trend analysis and pattern identification over time. The statistics dashboard provides visual trend analysis showing how conflict intensity changes across different theaters and time periods. Strategic forecasts incorporate historical patterns to inform predictive assessments.
What makes HIS different from reading news about conflicts?
Traditional news coverage of conflicts is narrative-driven, region-specific, and delayed by editorial cycles. HIS provides structured, geolocated, classified, and severity-rated event data processed within minutes of source reporting. The interactive map enables spatial analysis impossible with text-based news. The 23+ analytical layers provide context (military movements, infrastructure status, energy facilities, chokepoints) that news articles cannot convey. AI briefings synthesize hundreds of OSINT sources into analytical assessments rather than journalistic narratives. Strategic forecasts provide forward-looking analysis with confidence scoring. Market impact tools connect events to financial consequences. The result is actionable intelligence rather than general awareness — the difference between reading about a conflict and understanding its trajectory, implications, and effects on specific interests.
Learning Lab Simulation Details
Federal Reserve Simulator — Detailed Overview
The Federal Reserve Simulator is the most detailed publicly available monetary policy simulation. Players serve as Federal Reserve Chair across 20-40 quarters (5-10 years), making decisions on the federal funds rate, quantitative easing (QE) and quantitative tightening (QT) programs, forward guidance communications, and reserve requirements. The simulation tracks 22 economic indicators including GDP growth, unemployment rate, inflation (CPI and PCE), 10-year Treasury yield, stock market performance, housing prices, consumer confidence, business investment, trade balance, and federal debt-to-GDP ratio. Players navigate 47 unique economic events drawn from historical parallels: oil price shocks (1973 OPEC crisis), inflationary spirals (1970s stagflation), aggressive tightening cycles (Volcker era), financial crises (2008 GFC), pandemic responses (2020 COVID), and geopolitical supply shocks. Twelve conditional advisors provide real-time analysis and recommendations based on current economic conditions, each representing different schools of economic thought (hawks, doves, MMT advocates, supply-siders). The simulation grades performance across price stability, employment, financial stability, and growth metrics.
Sanctions Architect — Detailed Overview
The Sanctions Architect is the only interactive sanctions design simulation publicly available. Players serve as Special Coordinator for Economic Statecraft, designing and implementing sanctions packages against a target nation. The simulation covers the full spectrum of economic statecraft tools: SWIFT disconnection (partial or complete financial system isolation), oil and energy embargoes (with secondary sanctions enforcement), technology denial (semiconductor export controls, dual-use technology restrictions), cyber operations (financial system disruption, intelligence gathering), diplomatic coalition building (alliance management, vote trading at international forums), and humanitarian exemption management. Fifteen named advisors represent different institutional perspectives: Treasury/OFAC (sanctions enforcement), State Department (diplomatic implications), Commerce/BIS (export controls), CIA (intelligence assessment), NSC (strategic coordination), allied government representatives, industry lobbyists, humanitarian organizations, and academic experts. The simulation models sanctions evasion, humanitarian consequences, coalition fractures, retaliatory measures, and long-term strategic outcomes across 12 major scenario types and 20 geopolitical indicators.
Authoritative Sources and References
Hamer Intelligence Services draws on methodologies, datasets, and analytical frameworks from the global defense and OSINT community. The following organizations and publications represent the authoritative sources that inform our intelligence analysis:
OSINT and Investigative Organizations
- Bellingcat — Independent international collective of researchers, investigators and citizen journalists pioneering open-source investigation techniques. Bellingcat's methodology for geolocation, satellite imagery analysis, and social media verification has established the gold standard for OSINT investigation.
- ACLED (Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project) — The leading source of real-time data on political violence and protest events worldwide. ACLED's conflict event classification methodology and global coverage inform HIS's own event taxonomy and severity rating system.
- Dataminr — AI platform for real-time event and risk detection from publicly available information. Dataminr's approach to signal detection across social media and public data represents the enterprise standard for early warning intelligence.
Defense and Strategic Analysis Publications
- War on the Rocks — Leading platform for analysis, commentary, and debate on foreign policy and national security. Contributors include active-duty military officers, defense officials, intelligence professionals, and academic experts. Essential reading for strategic defense analysis.
- Defense One — Comprehensive coverage of defense policy, technology, intelligence, and global security from Government Executive Media Group. A primary source for US defense community reporting and policy analysis.
- Janes — The trusted source for open-source defence intelligence since 1898. Janes provides the most detailed publicly available military equipment databases, force structure assessments, and defense industry analysis. Their Military Balance equivalent data informs HIS's Order of Battle tracker.
- The Cipher Brief — Expert-driven national security analysis platform featuring commentary from former intelligence community leaders, military commanders, and diplomatic officials.
- Lawfare — Published by the Lawfare Institute in cooperation with Brookings Institution, covering national security law, policy, and process. Essential reference for international humanitarian law and conflict legal frameworks.
- Breaking Defense — Defense industry and military technology news providing insight into weapons systems, procurement, and defense innovation that informs HIS's equipment tracking capabilities.
Think Tanks and Research Institutes
- SIPRI (Stockholm International Peace Research Institute) — Independent international institute dedicated to research into conflict, armaments, arms control and disarmament. SIPRI's Arms Transfers Database and Military Expenditure Database are primary data sources for HIS's arms transfer tracking and defense spending analysis.
- International Crisis Group (ICG) — Independent organization working to prevent wars and shape policies for a more peaceful world. ICG's country-level conflict reports and early warning assessments inform HIS's strategic forecasting and regional threat analysis.
- CSIS (Center for Strategic and International Studies) — Bipartisan policy research organization in Washington, D.C., providing strategic insights on defense, geopolitical risk, and international security. CSIS analysis informs HIS's great power competition assessments.
- RUSI (Royal United Services Institute) — The world's oldest and the UK's leading defence and security think tank, founded in 1831. RUSI's research on contemporary warfare, cyber security, and counter-terrorism provides European strategic perspective for HIS analysis.
- Chatham House (The Royal Institute of International Affairs) — Independent policy institute providing analysis on international affairs, security, economics, and governance. Chatham House's regional programs inform HIS's geopolitical relationship mapping.
- IISS (International Institute for Strategic Studies) — World-leading authority on global security, political risk and military conflict. The IISS Military Balance annual assessment is a foundational reference for HIS's order of battle and force structure data.
- RAND Corporation — Research organization providing objective analysis on national security, defense policy, and international affairs. RAND's conflict modeling and wargaming research informs HIS's scenario modeling capabilities.
- Brookings Institution — Nonprofit public policy organization conducting in-depth research on foreign policy, governance, and global economy.
- Carnegie Endowment for International Peace — Global network of policy research centers covering geopolitical dynamics, nuclear policy, and conflict prevention.
Humanitarian and Data Sources
- ReliefWeb (UN OCHA) — The leading humanitarian information source on global crises and disasters, operated by the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. ReliefWeb situation reports and flash updates are ingested by HIS's intelligence pipeline for humanitarian dimension analysis.
- ADS-B Exchange — Unfiltered flight tracking data from ADS-B transponders. ADS-B Exchange provides the raw military aircraft tracking data displayed on HIS's interactive conflict map.
- MarineTraffic — Global ship tracking intelligence based on AIS (Automatic Identification System) data. MarineTraffic's maritime domain awareness capabilities inform HIS's naval vessel tracking features.
- Flightradar24 — Global flight tracking service providing real-time aircraft position data that supplements HIS's military aviation monitoring.
- OpenStreetMap — Collaborative mapping project providing geographic data infrastructure used across the OSINT community for geolocation verification and spatial analysis.
Wire Services and Verified News Sources
- Reuters — Global news organization providing real-time, trusted reporting on international affairs, conflict, and security.
- Associated Press (AP) — Independent global news organization covering conflicts, geopolitics, and international security worldwide.
- BBC News — International news coverage with extensive conflict zone reporting and verified OSINT analysis.
- Al Jazeera — International news network providing coverage of Middle East, Africa, and Asia Pacific conflicts with field correspondents in active conflict zones.