About D3
D3 – Domain Due Diligence is a SaaS platform that delivers audit-grade domain and brand intelligence to M&A advisors, legal teams, investors and compliance professionals. Operating across 17 authoritative data sources — from DNS resolvers and RDAP registrars to ICANN zone files and trademark registries — D3 produces SHA-256 signed, timestamped reports within minutes.
The output is a D3 Certified Report: a structured evidence document designed to be annexed to transaction documents, regulatory submissions and legal filings. D3 is developed and operated by Veniatis, a company registered in the Netherlands.
Key Facts & Figures
Products
Brand name availability, conflict check and defensibility analysis. Multi-TLD availability matrix and lookalike domain landscape.
Technical DNS and email security audit. SPF, DKIM, DMARC, DNSSEC, MTA-STS. Findings mapped to NIS2 Article 21, ISO 27001:2022 and PCI DSS 4.0.
Brand & domain value assessment for pre-acquisition decisions. Interprets DNS health, reputation signals and typosquatting landscape through a commercial valuation lens.
Complete risk inventory for M&A, licensing and partnership transactions. All connectors in full. Every finding mapped to legal exposure and compliance gaps. SHA-256 signed evidence bundle included.
Founder's Statement
“When a lawyer is about to advise on a multi-million euro acquisition, or a brand strategist is about to recommend a name that a client will build an entire company around, they deserve certainty — not a screenshot of a WHOIS lookup. D3 exists to close that gap.”
— Tom Geisink, Founder — Veniatis / D3
Brand & Logo Guidelines
- ·Full name: D3 – Domain Due Diligence (use on first reference). Short name: D3 (subsequent references).
- ·Do not write 'D-3', 'D3DD', or 'd3'.
- ·Logo files: www.domain-due-diligence.com/brand/
- ·Primary colour: #1C3D5A (navy). Accent: #C6A75E (gold). Do not alter or recolour the logo.
Brand Colours
Regulatory & Compliance Coverage
Evidence for A.8.16 (monitoring activities), A.8.7 (malware protection) and A.8.9 (configuration management)
Art. 21(2)(a) risk analysis, Art. 21(2)(h) cryptography and DNSSEC, continuous monitoring for essential and important entities
Requirement 12.3 — risk assessment documentation for internet-facing assets
Article 32 — appropriate technical measures; domain security as part of organisational data security posture
ICT risk management — network and information systems integrity for financial entities
Timestamped, SHA-256 signed evidence of typosquatting and domain abuse for trademark dispute proceedings
Media Contact
This press kit may be reproduced in full or in part for editorial and journalistic purposes. For commercial licensing or white-label enquiries, contact Veniatis.