Same data layer
Maritime + sanctions + ownership + news. The exact stack a shadow-fleet investigation needs.
For newsrooms, think tanks, OSINT collectives, university research groups. Per-tenant deploy keeps investigations confidential. Every claim cites its source — the evidence chain stays defensible.
A journalist tracking Russian oil sanctions evasion has to identify candidate vessels, trace ownership through opaque structures, verify port calls and cargo, cross-reference with public reporting, and build a citation chain their editor will accept.
Today, the work runs on the MarineTraffic free tier, OpenSanctions, archive.org, and dozens of hours of manual reading. Many investigations get killed because the time-to-finding is too long.
insigz makes investigations 10× faster without compromising the evidence chain. Per-tenant deploy keeps the work confidential; every claim in the output cites source observations.
What the platform brings to this vertical specifically. Not generic features — the things that map to the actual workflow.
Maritime + sanctions + ownership + news. The exact stack a shadow-fleet investigation needs.
Per-tenant deploy. Investigations do not sit in a shared SaaS pool a hostile party could subpoena.
Working journalists and NGOs get a substantially reduced rate in exchange for citation rights when the story publishes.
A concrete walk-through. This is what the platform does inside the operator's head, made visible.
"Vessels turning off AIS near Lakonikos Bay since January."
Each candidate vessel ownership traced through consolidated watchlists.
Port calls, news mentions, sanctions exposure layered in.
Every claim in the published story is one click from its source.
Indicative ranges. Final pricing depends on data sources, usage volume, and SLA tier — talk to us for an actual quote.
An investigative reporter at a European newsroom traced a sanctions-evading vessel through three flag changes, four shell companies, and two cargo transfers. Total time: 6 hours. Total cost: a sub-CHF-30k annual license. Story landed on the FT front page.
The newsroom paid for itself the same week.