DNS Database Update

April 20, 2017

DomainEye always strives to improve, so we’re proud to let you know that our database has now reached 701 mln expired and existing domains! The total number of registered domains is 273 mln while the number of domains with DNS or Whois data is at 288 mln. Aiming at collecting as much domain data as … Continue reading DNS Database Update



DomainEye Joins Forces with ApiHawk in an Apic Partnership!

April 4, 2017

… The month of March looks epic so far! DomainEye is happy to announce its new partnership with ApiHawk, a leading software solutions company with excellent prospects. ApiHawk develops software products and solutions aimed at streamlining business processes and achieving more efficient management of hosting companies, datacenters, etc. Maintaining high standards of quality and customer … Continue reading DomainEye Joins Forces with ApiHawk in an Apic Partnership!



Historical Whois Lookups will be Here Soon!

March 14, 2017

We’re constantly striving to provide you with more research and investigation tools. Our latest development is a historical Whois lookup that allows you to track domain ownership to identify when domains changed hands over time and who did it. Identifying ownership is as important as ever in investigating cyberattackers committing online fraud, phishing, brand infringement, … Continue reading Historical Whois Lookups will be Here Soon!



The DNS Database Update is Here!

February 10, 2017

DomainEye always aims to provide better services so we’re happy to announce that our domain database has expanded to cover 692+ mln expired and existing domains! There’s more! The DNS data of 266 mln active domains has been updated and the good news is that you can now search them all via our lookups including … Continue reading The DNS Database Update is Here!



Coming Soon: Reverse NS* and Reverse MX* Lookups

January 16, 2017

Apart from the regular reverse NS and MX lookups, we’ll soon offer all our registered users extended reverse lookups that cover much more search results, not only exact matches. This means that more interrelations between domains can be discovered. For example, ‘reverse NS*’ for domain.com would be: domain.com => ns1.domain.com on http://www.domaineye.com/ns-star/domain.com.