Intelium Corp. , which is headed up by Luc Lezon CEO, has rolled out their newest site DomainIQ.com, “the world’s most powerful domain name and internet research tool.”
The site “was created by software engineers with over a decade of experience in the domain industry which created popular services including EstiBot, Dropping.com, Domainex, DomainResearchTool and PremiumDrops”
“DomainIQ allows users to discover everything about a domain name; its owner, the server it is hosted on, its ownership history, similar domains and much more.
Reports are simple, straightforward and easy to understand with both textual and visual presentations not available on any other competing service.
The service was designed for domain name investors, security researchers, cybercrime investigators and the legal community. Practical applications include everything from buying a domain name anonymously, to uncovering hidden registrant emails to counter-terrorism hosting research.
Their flexible and easy to use reporting tools allow users to generate comprehensive domain and email reports instantly and at a fraction of the price charged by competitors.
Unlike competing products that rely solely on whois data, domainIQ reports combine over 50 data sets including categorization, traffic prediction, analytics, usage, valuation and many more to produce the most comprehensive and useful reports available.
domainIQ’s intelligence gathering infrastructure stores billions of data points from a wide variety of sources and uses it to generate reports that are unmatched in depth, detail and accuracy.
domainIQ offers three competitive plans starting as low as $24.95/month.”
Obviously this appears to be a DomainTools.com competitor.
DNPric.es says
A mobile app is the next step, and then the historic prices integrated in the domainiq. Just a thought.
Luc says
It’s in the appstore awaiting approval. Hopefully they will approve it within the next few days. I’ll add historic prices to the to-do list.
groovy says
A new service that purports to be “comprehensive domain intelligence” should try to support ALL the new tld’s.
My MAC terminal can provide me more information than domainIQ.wft 😉
Groovy:~ Groovy$ whois domainIQ.wtf
Domain not found.
Groovy:~ Groovy$ whois domain.wtf
This name is reserved by the Registry in accordance with ICANN Policy.
Domain.wtf
We apologize, but the extension .WTF is not currently supported by our system.
Groovy…
groovy says
My MAC terminal can provide me more information than domainIQ.wtf
Thankfully cut n paste works for the live examples 😉
groovy says
Forgot to mention, other than the lack of support for ntld the site is excellent, many new and innovative ways of using domain metrics.
Perseus Da Silva says
It still is buggy, a little. I have done 3 searches so far and on 2, it showed me that the domains i was researching were available, when obviously they weren’t. Happens on DomainTools, too, but the frequency is way less compared to DomainIQ. I hope they can rectify that.
Having said that, otherwise, it’s a great website and will definitely be using it quite a lot. Especially after i cross my daily limit on DomainTools 😉
Luc says
Thank you for the feedback. This is still a beta product, so it’s not perfect. Your feedback will help us get there. Please provide some examples of the 3 domains that were showing invalid status and we’ll get it resolved immediately.
Perseus Da Silva says
I have provided the information through the bug report on your website.
Perseus Da Silva says
Also, they do not support the .mx and .com.br extensions. I know its still a relatively new website, but if you’re going to compete with DomainTools, it needs to be atleast equal to, if not better.
Steve Cheatham says
First check and attempt to use found this: They want a credit card even for the free account.” The link to use it free is buried on the plan comparison page in small type.
Since they want a credit card and it is my policy to not give it out in this manner, I can’t test it to see if it is indeed “the world’s most powerful domain name and internet research tool”.
Luc says
Thank you for your feedback. Credit cards are required to prevent service abuse. If all we required was an email, then a user could create infinite accounts every time they maxed out their limits. We may pull this requirement based on customer feedback, but for now it’s the easiest method of preventing abuse.
Steve Cheatham says
You have a point about abuse. Add PayPal. That will be better for many folks.
Luc says
Steve. Based on your comment, we’ll add it in. It should be integrated by Tuesday.
Danny Pryor says
Perhaps this company should focus on provided actual domain name information instead of trying to “guess” at traffic numbers. I put in one of my domains to check the data, and it estimated monthly visits of “75”. I hate to tell you this, guys, but I get that in about 45 minutes. Also, trash Alexa info. It means absolutely nothing and adds no valuable insight.
Owen Frager says
According to this service I own 9600 domains and it tempts me with buying a report to see what one and two letter .US domains within that own specifically. If I didn’t know better I’d think I won the lottery!
Steve Cheatham says
I tried it. It is a competitor to Domain Tools and it is nice to have an alternative. Good luck with this venture guys.
I agree with Danny that the traffic is low.
But I have to add when I ran the same site on Encapusla I found out the robot traffic is way higher than I expected. All robots can be filtered out at Encapusla so I was able to see real traffic. It is an eye opener to view traffic in that manner. I also found that robot traffic was much higher on sites with daily content or databases. Scrapers. Out of country copyright violators etc. Everybody is loosing valuable traffic to those scoundrels.