Book Image

Mobile Forensics Cookbook

By : Igor Mikhaylov
Book Image

Mobile Forensics Cookbook

By: Igor Mikhaylov

Overview of this book

Considering the emerging use of mobile phones, there is a growing need for mobile forensics. Mobile forensics focuses specifically on performing forensic examinations of mobile devices, which involves extracting, recovering and analyzing data for the purposes of information security, criminal and civil investigations, and internal investigations. Mobile Forensics Cookbook starts by explaining SIM cards acquisition and analysis using modern forensics tools. You will discover the different software solutions that enable digital forensic examiners to quickly and easily acquire forensic images. You will also learn about forensics analysis and acquisition on Android, iOS, Windows Mobile, and BlackBerry devices. Next, you will understand the importance of cloud computing in the world of mobile forensics and understand different techniques available to extract data from the cloud. Going through the fundamentals of SQLite and Plists Forensics, you will learn how to extract forensic artifacts from these sources with appropriate tools. By the end of this book, you will be well versed with the advanced mobile forensics techniques that will help you perform the complete forensic acquisition and analysis of user data stored in different devices.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
Title Page
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface

Parsing SQLite databases with Belkasoft Evidence Center


The Belkasoft Evidence Center program has already been described previously in Chapter 2, Android Devices Acquisition. This program has the functionality for SQLite database analysis on both mobile devices and PCs. In this chapter, we will describe how to analyze a SQLite database with Belkasoft Evidence Center.

How to do it…

In this recipe, we will describe an interesting case. The problem was the following: on the screen of an examined iPhone 5 there was correspondence with two people on Skype, but it was not seen in the results of the analysis, the extracted data, which was displayed in the forensic tools. Before I was asked for assistance, my colleagues vainly tried all mobile forensics tools they had. The tools could not provide access to the correspondence.

The iTunes backup of this device was analyzed via Belkasoft Evidence Center (the process of it will be described in Chapter 9, iOS Forensics, in the iOS backups parsing with Belkasoft...