Book Image

Practical Mobile Forensics - Second Edition

By : Heather Mahalik, Rohit Tamma, Satish Bommisetty
Book Image

Practical Mobile Forensics - Second Edition

By: Heather Mahalik, Rohit Tamma, Satish Bommisetty

Overview of this book

Mobile phone forensics is the science of retrieving data from a mobile phone under forensically sound conditions. This book is an update to Practical Mobile Forensics and it delves into the concepts of mobile forensics and its importance in today's world. We will deep dive into mobile forensics techniques in iOS 8 - 9.2, Android 4.4 - 6, and Windows Phone devices. We will demonstrate the latest open source and commercial mobile forensics tools, enabling you to analyze and retrieve data effectively. You will learn how to introspect and retrieve data from cloud, and document and prepare reports for your investigations. By the end of this book, you will have mastered the current operating systems and techniques so you can recover data from mobile devices by leveraging open source solutions.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
Practical Mobile Forensics - Second Edition
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface

Chapter 9. Android Data Extraction Techniques

Using any of the screen lock bypass techniques explained in Chapter 8Android Forensic Setup and Pre Data Extraction Techniques, an examiner can try to access a locked device. Once the device is accessible, the next task is to extract the information present on the device. This can be achieved by applying various data extraction techniques to the Android device. This chapter will help you to identify the sensitive locations present on an Android device and explain various logical and physical techniques that can be applied to the device in order to extract the necessary information.

In this chapter, we will cover the following topics:

  • Logical data extraction using ADB pull, ADB backup, ADB dumpsys, and content providers

  • Physical extraction, which covers imaging an Android device and SD card, JTAG, and chip-off techniques