Wednesday, January 7, 2026

Inside Canary Mission: Secret BlackNest site scans, tracks activists

 

BlackNest Canary Mission doxxing targeting Zionism Palestine solidarity technology surveillance Israel lobby

An investigation reveals a covert network of unlisted websites, internal dashboards, and data pipelines used to monitor, pressure, and blacklist activists behind the scenes.

A network of unlisted websites tied to the pro-"Israel" doxxing group Canary Mission reveals a sprawling, professionalized operation that includes anonymous contributors, international tech vendors, marketing strategies, and a secret internal platform known as BlackNest. According to materials uncovered by Drop Site, BlackNest tracks firings, arrests, and deportations as measurable “company impact” metrics, outcomes the group openly celebrates.

BlackNest is one of several unlisted websites and content management systems used by Canary Mission, whose doxxing campaign operates out of "Israel" and has reportedly been leveraged by senior levels of the Trump administration. The information contained across these hidden platforms, ranging from names of staff and contractors to internal meeting notes, quarterly plans, and strategic documents, offers a rare look at how the operation has expanded and evolved.

The group’s non-public sites outline plans to broaden its efforts to punish Americans for pro-Palestine speech through doxxing and pressure campaigns, with arrests and deportations increasingly carried out by allies inside the State Department.

Web development material tied to BlackNest sheds light on how Canary Mission defines success. The platform categorizes outcomes under labels such as “change of behavior,” job loss, denial of entry to the United States, arrests, and “deportation/forced to flee.” The site also compiles media mentions, largely from US outlets, and highlights coverage that references Canary Mission’s influence.

Drop Site News previously reported on how donations flow to the group, but details about its staff, internal structure, and technical operations remained largely opaque due to Canary Mission’s secrecy. That changed after Drop Site obtained more than 100 gigabytes of data accessed through the backend of Canary Mission’s website, uncovering multiple live but intentionally hidden sites.  (more...)

Inside Canary Mission: Secret BlackNest site scans, tracks activists


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