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CONTACT US
Email Support: support@ubikron.com
Sales Inquiries: sales@ubikron.com
Join Us on Slack: Link to Slack Channel

FAQS

Answers to questions you might have about purchasing.

What is Ubikron?

Ubikron is a Chrome extension that speaks to a server (in the cloud or in your server room) and keeps track of sites you’ve browsed to. It saves screenshots of the sites as well as all the body text. It allows you to make notes and mark screen areas on a page as important. You can create tags and apply it to screenshots and/or pages.  You can save entire pages as MHTML with the click of a button or save it automatically when tagged. Later you can visually search sites you’ve visited, use search free text, search images or organize your browsing history by tag. There’s a markup area for your notes. Finally, the web pages, notes, images are bundled up to a RAG AI assistant that you can interrogate. You can also share your projects with other analysts.

Who uses Ubikron?

Online researchers, OSINT specialists, law enforcement, intelligence analysts, threat intelligence, cyber security analysts or investigative journalists find Ubikron very useful. But, it can really be used by anyone that want to recall their online research.

Why do they use it?

An analyst would typically visit thousands of web pages when researching a topic, individual or a group. These pages could be a mix of surface web, social media, deep web and pages on internal systems. Many of these pages are behind credentials / authentication.  Keeping track of pages, snippets and text seen over the course of several days, week or months is hard enough to do. But making sense of it months or years later is impossible. Ubikron is a system that allows you to do that – to organize your research.

What do you actually sell?

The Ubikron system comprises of a client and server. The client is a Chrome extension, and it speaks to a server where the information is stored and where it can be analyzed. We sell these servers. The clients will likely stay free.  You can test drive the (free for now) public server and you can download and install a try-before-you-buy server that's limited to 1 user.

What about privacy?

The idea with Ubikron was always to sell private servers. The public server exists so you can see what Ubikron is like without having to download and configure your own server. You may also download and install a test server that is limited to 1 users and a few projects - then you can see how private servers function before you make a decision on buying one.