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Practical Mobile Forensics

You're reading from   Practical Mobile Forensics Dive into mobile forensics on iOS, Android, Windows, and BlackBerry devices with this action-packed, practical guide

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2014
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781783288311
Length 328 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Tools
Concepts
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Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introduction to Mobile Forensics 2. Understanding the Internals of iOS Devices FREE CHAPTER 3. Data Acquisition from iOS Devices 4. Data Acquisition from iOS Backups 5. iOS Data Analysis and Recovery 6. iOS Forensic Tools 7. Understanding Android 8. Android Forensic Setup and Pre Data Extraction Techniques 9. Android Data Extraction Techniques 10. Android Data Recovery Techniques 11. Android App Analysis and Overview of Forensic Tools 12. Windows Phone Forensics 13. BlackBerry Forensics Index

Good forensic practices

Good forensic practices apply to the collection and preservation of evidence. Following the good forensic practices ensures that evidence will be accepted in a court as being authentic and accurate. Modification of evidence, either intentionally or accidentally, can affect the case. So, understanding the best practices is critical for forensic examiners.

Securing the evidence

With advanced smartphone features such as Find My iPhone and remote wipes, securing a mobile phone in a way that it cannot be remotely wiped is of great importance. Also, when the phone is powered on and has service, it constantly receives new data. To secure the evidence, use the right equipment and techniques to isolate the phone from all networks. With isolation, the phone is prevented from receiving any new data that would cause active data to be deleted.

Preserving the evidence

As evidence is collected, it must be preserved in a state that is acceptable in court. Working directly on the original copies of evidence might alter it. So, as soon as you recover a raw disk image or files, create a read-only master copy and duplicate it. In order for evidence to be admissible, there must be a method to verify that the evidence presented is exactly the same as the original collected. This can be accomplished by creating a hash value of the image. After duplicating the raw disk image or files, compute and verify the hash values for the original and the copy to ensure that the integrity of the evidence is maintained. Any changes in hash values should be documented and explainable. All further processing or examination should be performed on copies of the evidence. Any use of the device might alter the information stored on the handset. So, perform only the tasks that are absolutely necessary.

Documenting the evidence

Be sure to document all the methods and tools that are used to collect and extract the evidence. Detail your notes so that another examiner could reproduce them. Your work must be reproducible; if not, a judge may rule it inadmissible.

Documenting all changes

It's important to document the entire recovery process, including all the changes made during the acquisition and examination. For example, if the forensic tool used for the data extraction sliced up the disk image to store it, this must be documented. All changes to the mobile device, including power cycling and syncing, should be documented in your case notes.

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