ABOUT
OpenIntel investigates and documents the corporate networks that sustain Israel's occupation and the systems of harm it depends on. Each company is profiled across four domains and scored on the BDS-1000 index - and every factual claim is cited to public evidence.
A public, searchable index of corporate complicity. For each company we publish a dossier built from four evidence-only forensic audits - military, digital, economic, and political - and a single composite score from 0 to 1,000 that places it in a tier from A (Extreme) to E (Limited). The site currently holds 98 vetted companies and 8,588 cited sources.
The aim is practical: to let an ordinary person check a brand before they buy, and to give organisers, journalists, and researchers a sourced, auditable reference they can rely on and cite.
Corporate involvement in the occupation is real, material, and largely a matter of public record - but that record is scattered across UN reports, court filings, NGO investigations, corporate disclosures, and the financial press. OpenIntel gathers it, weighs it against a consistent standard, and presents it in one place, so the question "is this company complicit, and how do you know?" has an answer you can check yourself.
Every score is built from evidence, not opinion. The audits contain no conclusions - only sourced facts - and where the public record is silent we say so rather than guess. Scores are computed by a fixed formula and reviewed domain by domain before a company is listed; companies that haven't passed that review don't appear. The full method, including the scoring formula, the tier definitions, and the evidence hierarchy, is set out on the methodology page.
OpenIntel is independent and not affiliated with, endorsed by, or funded by any of the companies it analyses, nor by any government. It is a work of public-interest research and political expression. All trademarks and logos are the property of their respective owners and are used here for identification and critical commentary. The assessments are an analytical and political judgement about corporate conduct, not a legal verdict - see the disclaimer for the full statement.
The index is regenerated continually from its underlying research, so corrections propagate to every affected page. If you think a company belongs in the index, you can suggest it for investigation - suggestions are vetted and, if accepted, researched and published. If you believe a specific cited fact is wrong or out of date, the same channel reaches us with the company and the source.