Showing posts with label mobile forensics Cape Town. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mobile forensics Cape Town. Show all posts

Tuesday, 11 December 2018

3 Reasons why you should always update WhatsApp


In this digital age, time is important, so most people want to satisfy most of their needs in just one click… More and more messengers are becoming popular, but WhatsApp still remains especially popular, which is why hackers keep their sights on it.

Image result for whatsapp

Here are some of the vulnerabilities in the WhatsApp application…

> Did you know that it is possible to gain access to an individual’s messages because of vulnerability in the WhatsApp protocol?

> Hackers can a gain access to a user’s cell phone by using a vulnerability that is triggered when a video call is answered.

> There is vulnerability with the two-factor authentication on WhatsApp. If a user switches off their phone at night, the password recovery system can be made to call and name the code, this code can be accessed using voicemail since most passwords are still weak.

To avoid becoming the next victim, always keep your WhatsApp updated! Has your phone been hacked? Please contact us immediately at TCG Digital Forensics in Cape Town and Centurion – give us a call on 021 110 0422 or email contact@tcgforensics.co.za

Wednesday, 24 August 2016

Digital Evidence – How It’s Done

Computer documents, emails, text and instant messages, transactions, images and Internet histories are examples of information that can be gathered from electronic devices and used very effectively as evidence. 


For example, mobile devices use online-based based backup systems, also known as the “cloud”, that provide forensic investigators with access to text / messaging app messages and pictures taken from a particular phone. These systems keep an average of 1,000–1,500 or more of the last text messages sent to and received from that phone.

In addition, many mobile devices store information about the locations where the device travelled and when it was there. To gain this knowledge, investigators can access an average of the last 200 cell locations accessed by a mobile device. Satellite navigation systems and satellite radios in cars can provide similar information. Even photos posted to social media such as Facebook or Instagram may contain location information. 

Photos taken with a Global Positioning System (GPS)-enabled device contain file data that shows when and exactly where a photo was taken. 


Investigators can collect a great deal of history related to a device and the person using it!


DLA is based in Cape Town and combines the experience of two seasoned investigators with both criminal and civil backgrounds with the latest technologies to achieve the results that you require.

Thursday, 28 April 2016

When the Trill of a Cell phone Brings the Clang of Prison Doors

It was a crucial moment in 2007 during the trial of Paul Cortez, an actor and yoga teacher who was ultimately convicted of killing his former girlfriend Catherine Woods, a dancer who was working as a stripper.

After weeks of testimony and a parade of witnesses, the case against Mr. Cortez boiled down to this: a bloody fingerprint and data collected from a cell phone.

A record from a T-Mobile cell phone transmission tower on the day Ms. Woods was murdered showed that Mr. Cortez called her 13 times in the hour and a half before her death, and then never again. He had told the police in a written statement that he made the calls from his home.

But as he called, the record showed his cell signal hitting a tower near his apartment, and gradually shifting to towers near Ms. Woods’s apartment. At trial, when the prosecutor questioned him about the discrepancy, Mr. Cortez changed course, saying he had made some of the calls from a Starbucks.


Examining cell phone data is a technique that has moved from being a masterful surprise in trials to being a standard tool in the investigative arsenal of the police and prosecutors, with records routinely provided by cell phone companies in response to subpoenas. 

Its use in prosecutions is often challenged, for privacy reasons and for technical reasons, especially when the data comes during the morning or evening rush, when circuits are crowded and calls can be redirected to other towers. But it is often allowed and is used by both prosecutors and defence attorneys to buttress their cases.


DLA combines the experience of two seasoned investigators with both criminal and civil backgrounds with the latest technologies for the best results.

Wednesday, 13 April 2016

Israeli mobile forensics firm helping FBI unlock seized iPhone

The mobile forensics firm Cellebrite of Israel is reportedly assisting the Federal Bureau of Investigation in unlocking a seized iPhone that has become the center of a legal dispute between the bureau and Apple.


The revelation comes two days after the US government tentatively withdrew its demands that Apple write code and assist the authorities to unlock a seized iPhone used by one of the San Bernardino County shooters. The FBI told a federal judge that an "outside party demonstrated to the FBI a possible method for unlocking (Syed) Farook's iPhone." A federal magistrate then tentatively stayed her order demanding that Apple assist the authorities in unlocking the phone.

That same day, according to public records, the FBI committed to a $15 278 "action obligation" with Cellebrite. An "action obligation" is the lowest amount the government has agreed to pay. No other details of the contract were available, and the Justice Department declined comment. Cellebrite, however, has reportedly assisted US authorities in accessing an iPhone.

For now, US-based security experts believe that Cellebrite does have the wherewithal to perform the task.

"I'm really not at liberty to confirm the third party, but based on the techniques I've described in my blog on the subject, I think Cellebrite, as well as many large forensics firms like it, have the capability to perform such tasks," forensic scientist Jonathan Zdziarski told Ars in an e-mail. "DriveSavers, for example, has released statements yesterday suggesting they're almost there. I think the techniques are pretty straight forward for firms like these now that the tech community has had a chance to comment."

DLA is based in Cape Town and combines the experience of two seasoned investigators with both criminal and civil backgrounds with the latest technologies to achieve the results that you require - contact DLA today!

Wednesday, 6 April 2016

The demand for mobile forensics is continuously growing

Every day, more and more people are using smartphones. The amount of data which is wirelessly transmitted continues to increase at an impressive rate. According to the results of a survey there has been a huge increase in the number of active smartphones since 2011.


If you think about what our cell phones are today, they’ve actually moved away from simple cell phones and evolved into smartphones which are tiny, powerful computers that people are walking around with every day.

Digital forensic experts from DLA say that the value is not just in the cell phone call history and text messages. It’s about the ability to Google search whatever you want and have information at your fingertips. Cell phones have become diaries of people’s lives.

As digital detectives, DLA is trying to find out what was happening in somebody’s life, to whom they were talking, what the contents of those conversations were, and how they relate to the crime being investigated. This is indispensable evidence that can never be overlooked.


Mobile forensics examiners describe how there is probably more probative information found on a mobile device per byte examined than on computers. 

Friday, 26 February 2016

What is “Cellular Forensics” anyway?

So, what exactly is Cellular Forensics anyway? Well, forensics means “tests and techniques used in connection with the detection of crime.” Cellular? Every ones knows that deals with mobile phones and their technology.

Cellular forensics can also be referred to as Mobile forensics. So, when someone says Cellular forensics there are describing “the utilization of technology (software, hardware, techniques) that enables an examiner to secure, acquire, document and present the data found in a mobile phone.”

What good is Cellular Forensics? As some people say – you are what you click – and a cell phone tells a bunch about a person. Contacts, WhatsApp messages, Photos, location, SMSs and call history are just a few of the tell-all items in your phone. Imagine an employee sharing company secrets with the competition or a married man messaging his secret lover on WhatsApp… the information on their phone can be very damaging and valuable.

So, is this like your favourite show, CSI Miami? No not really! There is no one piece of hardware or software that can be used for the thousands of models of phones out there. But cellular forensic experts, like the professionals at DLA certainly know how to get their hands on the data on your cellphone that you thought was long gone!

Cellular forensics is like archaeology: you dig and dig using whatever proven tools you can find, and sometimes you crack the nut and other times you come away exhausted with little to show for your efforts.


Cellular Forensics today is not really a brand new field, however as our cell phones get more and more advanced, our methods need to be too.

Tuesday, 3 November 2015

The other side of mobile forensics

Mobile or cellular forensics isn’t just about finding WhatsApp messages, images and recent calls; it can also reveal much more. There’s a whole other side to it, which can include carrier data, call logs, undelivered messages and important data that reveals your exact location at the time of the incident. Matched together with the information saved to your mobile device, and mapped together with street names and landmarks, carrier data can enhance data on your device.

The best thing is, if cellular forensics is being used in an important crime case, they can be used to break the case. However, a lot of investigators overlook this critical evidence.

Most cell towers consist of poles that send and receive signals in three sectors; this makes it easier as it enables them to identify which side of the tower communicated with a cellular device.

Carriers keep detailed call records of these communications for billing purposes, so the data includes information like date, call length, whether a call was inbound, outbound, or went to voicemail.

Tower data reveals whether the device was in motion or stationary. A person dialing from one location will hit the same side of the same tower, but a person on the go will hit different towers and different sides.


In an investigation that uses mobile forensics, carrier data information can be vital. It can be used to place a phone in a certain area at a specific time, identify call patterns, establish timelines and identify suspects. 

DLA is based in Cape Town and combines the experience of two seasoned investigators with both criminal and civil backgrounds with the latest technologies to achieve the results that you require. Contact us today today!