In the early hours of 24 February, just before the start of the invasion, OSINT researchers at the
Middlebury Institute of International Studies at Monterey used
Google Maps to track a significantly large traffic jam on a road in Russia leading to the Ukrainian border.
Jeffrey Lewis subsequently tweeted "someone’s on the move." An hour later, Russian troops began the invasion. Netherlands-based investigative journalism group
Bellingcat has published interactive maps of destroyed civilian targets and has worked on authenticating potential documentation of war crimes. In July 2022, Bellingcat was banned as an undesirable organisation by the Russian government, with the
Prosecutor-General of Russia saying that it posed "a threat to the security of the Russian Federation."
Oryx gained international prominence through its work during the
Russian invasion of Ukraine, counting and keeping track of material losses based on visual evidence and OSINT from social media. It has been regularly cited in major media, including
Reuters,
BBC News,
The Guardian,
The Economist,
Newsweek,
CNN, and
CBS News.
Forbes has called Oryx "the most reliable source in the conflict so far", calling its services "outstanding". Because it reports only visually confirmed losses, Oryx's tallies of equipment losses have formed absolute minimum baselines for loss estimates.
The HALO Trust, the world's largest
mine clearance charity, has also conducted open source research into the conflict to understand the types of weapons used and the subsequent contamination across Ukraine, which requires clearance. OSINT groups have also used tools such as facial recognition apps to try to identify perpetrators of war crimes, such as the
Bucha massacre. == Debates ==