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The Intelligence No One Else Has: Inside Recorded Future s Proprietary Collection Engine


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2026-06-16 15:50:32
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Blue Team (CND)
Learn how Recorded Future’s proprietary collection engine empowers organizations to move beyond reactive security. Discover the power of our four unique intelligence source types—technical, underground, community, and open-source—working together to provide proactive, full-lifecycle threat protection.

Four Critical Source Types. One Platform. Recorded Future is the Only Threat Intelligence Vendor that Collects and Analyzes Across Four Types of Data Sources.


When a critical vulnerability emerges, most organizations scramble for answers.


What’s being exploited?
Who’s targeting it?
Are we exposed?


During the emergence of the React2Shell vulnerability, one Recorded Future customer didn’t rely on speculation. Using Recorded Future’s IP scanning intelligence, they identified which IPs were actively scanning for exploitation, analyzed the exact request patterns being used, and immediately assessed their own exposure.


Instead of reacting to headlines, they acted on real-time intelligence.


In the first article in our series covering our unique data sourcing model, we looked at why source scale and diversity are essential for maximum threat protection. Now we’ll explain the four source types in more detail to see how, together, they empower our customers to prioritize, pinpoint, and act faster to stop threats.


This is the power of Recorded Future’s technical collection engine.


Technical intelligence at internet scale


Recorded Future continuously collects and analyzes telemetry from across the internet, including:



  • Network traffic analysis across billions of daily network intelligence records (with over 200 points of presence (PoP))

  • Internet-wide scanning and infrastructure monitoring

  • Malware detonation and behavioral analysis

  • Vulnerability exploitation tracking


This technical intelligence provides direct visibility into attacker infrastructure, behavior, and intent.


Finding what others miss


Technical collection becomes most valuable when it reveals what’s hidden.


In one investigation, Recorded Future identified suspicious traffic on a specific port through its Malicious Traffic Analysis. This insight led a security team to uncover additional command-and-control communication that had been missed due to incomplete logging, expanding the scope of the compromise.


This isn’t just detection—it’s discovery.


Deep malware intelligence through sandboxing


Understanding malware requires more than static indicators.


Recorded Future processes over 1.5 million malware samples daily through its sandbox, enabling deep behavioral analysis of:



  • Command-line execution

  • Process activity

  • Network communication

  • Exploit techniques


This allows analysts to move beyond “Is this malicious?� to:



  • How does it behave?

  • What infrastructure does it use?

  • How can we detect it elsewhere?


Customers consistently highlight this capability as transformative.


In one case, a security analyst identified a unique command-line artifact within sandbox results. By pivoting on that behavior in their environment, they uncovered an additional infection vector that would have otherwise gone undetected—avoiding a far more complex incident response scenario.


Intelligence from the underground


Technical signals alone don’t tell the full story.


Recorded Future augments telemetry with intelligence from criminal forums, marketplaces, and adversary communications, revealing:



  • Stolen data and credentials

  • Emerging attack techniques

  • Threat actor intent

  • Ransomware victimology

  • Telegram


This provides critical context for prioritizing risk and understanding adversary motivations.


Community intelligence: strength in numbers


Recorded Future’s Collective Insights capability aggregates detections across organizations, helping customers identify patterns they might not see alone. This is especially important for preparing for monthly C-suite briefs on the latest threat assessments.


One logistics customer used this capability to investigate a multi-stage intrusion, correlating activity across their environment and linking it to nation-state actors in real time. Another customer uses Collective Insights to provide clear visibility into the specific malware most frequently blocked within their own environment, rather than relying on general trends.


This shared intelligence transforms isolated detections into campaign-level understanding.


Proactive defense in practice


This combination of technical, underground, and community intelligence enables proactive defense.


Customers often use Recorded Future’s Threat Map to identify an emerging threat actor and deploy detections in advance. Weeks later, when the actor launches a phishing campaign, customers can immediately detect and block the activity—preventing compromise before it begins.


Where open source fits


Open-source intelligence provides valuable context, but on its own it’s incomplete. Without technical telemetry, behavioral analysis, and external digital risk monitoring, organizations risk seeing only part of the threat landscape.


At Recorded Future, open sources are one part of a broader intelligence ecosystem that also supports data leakage detection, code repository monitoring, social media monitoring, and analysis of web infrastructure and content—including HTML and DOM elements—to identify brand abuse, exposed data, impersonation, and other external threats.


The bottom line


Recorded Future’s technical collection engine doesn’t just gather data. It reveals:



  • Who’s attacking

  • How attacks are executed

  • Where infrastructure is operating

  • When action is required


One platform for comprehensive threat intelligence


While some platforms focus on immediate detection, the Recorded Future Platform maintains years of historical data to reveal long-term patterns. And it automatically connects intelligence from diverse sources, turning separate data streams into unified insights.


From initial reconnaissance through criminal planning, active infrastructure attacks, and malware deployment, our four intelligence source types work together to enable proactive defense across the entire attack lifecycle.


In the next blog in our series, we’ll show how human experts connect the dots, validating our intelligence and making it actionable so you can prevent threats.


To see our four types of data sources in action in the Recorded Future Platform, request a custom demo.



Source: RecordedFuture
Source Link: https://www.recordedfuture.com/blog/recorded-future-proprietary-collection-engine


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