
We’ve released DNSDB Scout v2.5.9, bringing you improvements designed to make your investigative workflows smoother and more efficient; specifically:
For those who use DNSDB Scout together with Iris Investigate, we’ve added a new pivot option. You’ll now find an “Iris Investigate Inspect” tooltip option for all domain pivots in Scout.
Clicking this option will open a new browser tab directly to the Iris Investigate Inspect modal window, allowing you to quickly gather more information about a domain and initiate a new investigation. This is an effort to reduce friction and promote seamless interoperability between your security tools.
As Iris Investigate does not fully support subdomains in all contexts, the platform will typically fall back to the apex domain (e.g., sub.domain.com will pivot to domain.com). If you do not have an Iris Investigate subscription, you will be directed to the login page.
To improve data handling—especially from Scout to Iris Investigate—we’ve enhanced single-click copying from the Search Results table. Previously, copying data often included extra quotes and trailing dots, requiring manual editing of the copied results when pasting into other tools. With v2.5.9, this process is more streamlined.
What’s changed?
This change aims to minimize manual data cleanup and expedite investigations, particularly when pasting data into tools such as Iris Investigate.
The following table gives examples of how copying-to-clipboard works now, and how it worked before:
Note: there are a few limitations for the new default defanging behavior:
We’ve also introduced a new option to simplify your exported files. You can now opt into removing the root dot from fully qualified domain names (FQDNs) in RRName, Bailiwick, and RData columns for all exported file types.
This option was added to improve compatibility with other tools that may not expect trailing root dots. Our goal is to provide cleaner, more directly usable data without altering the fundamental meaning of your exported RData, maintaining consistency with the DNSDB API response for replicability.
You’ll find this new setting on the Options page.
Here are a few examples of how the export behavior still works by default, and the optional new export behavior:
Note: There are a few limitations for the new opt-in export formatting behavior:
Removing the root dot in data exports may impact Regex Highlighting (e.g., in PDFs) if your original query included a root dot (\.$).
We believe these updates will enhance your experience with DNSDB Scout by improving interoperability and data handling. If you’re curious to learn more about how DNSDB and Iris Investigate complement each other by blending active and passive DNS intelligence, check out this blog post to follow a sample investigation utilizing both solutions.
Request a demo today if you’d like to learn more about DomainTools solutions!