druskacik 6 hours ago

There is basically identical project I've been aware of for some time, and it seems to be shutting down in two weeks according to their website. What's the story here?

https://zonefiles.io/

yashasolutions a day ago

This is pretty awesome. Would be better when the compromised domain list get updated. Just imagine what could be done in terms of alternative search products to replace the fallen Google (not even commercially, but just a search product that actually work)

  • iryndin a day ago

    Appreciate the kind words! I agree, there's a lot of untapped potential in domain-level data. A regularly updated compromised domain list would definitely be a valuable extra, I am working on adding it as soon as possible!

abhishekpandey a day ago

This is amazing. I didn't know this sort of list can be created. I haven't subscribed for a paid plan but I know I will spend time just browsing and analyzing... what is the source of this information?

  • iryndin a day ago

    Thank you! Glad you find it interesting - it’s definitely fun (and sometimes surprising) to explore how the domain landscape evolves. I don’t publicly share specific data sources, but creating and maintaining a comprehensive list across 1570+ zones involves a mix of aggregation, normalization, and ongoing reconciliation work. Domain data is updated daily. AllZoneFiles.io is here to save you a ton of time and effort on that, so that you be able to easily get the latest, fullest and most up-to-date domain data anytime you need it.

kocial a day ago

I saw the source on the internet last week, but I was extremely lazy to download it, and without realising how valuable it is.

I will be hunting my browser history tonight.

  • iryndin a day ago

    Glad it caught your attention! If it helps, AllZoneFiles.io is designed to save you that browser archaeology: everything’s centralized, downloadable in bulk or by zone, and accessible via API if you want to automate it.

phillipseamore a day ago

This seems to have two sources, publicly available zones and compilations from certificate transparency logs.

  • iryndin a day ago

    Thanks for checking it out! Neither source alone provides a full or reliably structured picture across all TLDs, especially considering differences in availability, formats, and update frequencies. AllZoneFiles.io focuses on unifying and maintaining a consistent, deduplicated, and regularly updated dataset spanning 1570+ zones and 300M+ (as of today: 305+ millions) domains. I prefer not to go into detail on the exact sourcing pipeline, but it involves a fair amount of normalization, reconciliation, and monitoring to keep the data accurate and usable at scale. Thank you!

natewww 16 hours ago

thats a lot of domains, awesome

  • iryndin 16 hours ago

    And it is ever growing number (number of domains)!