World Monitor — One Map for All Global Intelligence
Think of World Monitor as a geopolitical control panel — not just one dataset but dozens, layered onto a single interactive globe. Where LiveUAmap tracks individual incidents, World Monitor tracks the larger picture: why tensions exist, where the pressure points are, what the underlying infrastructure looks like.
| Layer | What It Shows |
| Active conflicts | Live conflict zones globally |
| Military bases | Known military installations worldwide |
| Strategic waterways | Chokepoints — Strait of Hormuz, Suez, South China Sea |
| Economic disruptions | Trade route interference, sanctions impact |
| Infrastructure outages | Power grids, internet cables, critical systems |
| Geopolitical hotspots | Tension zones before they become conflict zones |
What makes it different: World Monitor integrates GDELT data (a global database of news events) and AI-synthesized intelligence briefs — so you’re not just reading pins on a map, you’re getting context.
LiveUAmap — Real-Time Conflict Incidents, Pinned on a Map
LiveUAmap was built by Ukrainian engineers who needed a better way to track what was happening on the ground when traditional media was too slow. It aggregates from news outlets, social media, and direct field reports — and places every incident as a pin on an interactive map with a timestamp.
Dedicated regional maps:
What each incident pin tells you:
| Field | Info |
| Event type | Airstrike, explosion, movement, political development |
| Timestamp | When it was reported |
| Source | Where the report came from |
| Location | Exact map pin — geolocated |
Critical note: LiveUAmap aggregates from multiple sources including Telegram channels and social media — always cross-reference before treating any single pin as confirmed. The free version has ads; paid removes them and unlocks historical satellite maps.