Book Image

Mobile Forensics ??? Advanced Investigative Strategies

By : Oleg Afonin, Vladimir Katalov
Book Image

Mobile Forensics ??? Advanced Investigative Strategies

By: Oleg Afonin, Vladimir Katalov

Overview of this book

Investigating digital media is impossible without forensic tools. Dealing with complex forensic problems requires the use of dedicated tools, and even more importantly, the right strategies. In this book, you’ll learn strategies and methods to deal with information stored on smartphones and tablets and see how to put the right tools to work. We begin by helping you understand the concept of mobile devices as a source of valuable evidence. Throughout this book, you will explore strategies and "plays" and decide when to use each technique. We cover important techniques such as seizing techniques to shield the device, and acquisition techniques including physical acquisition (via a USB connection), logical acquisition via data backups, over-the-air acquisition. We also explore cloud analysis, evidence discovery and data analysis, tools for mobile forensics, and tools to help you discover and analyze evidence. By the end of the book, you will have a better understanding of the tools and methods used to deal with the challenges of acquiring, preserving, and extracting evidence stored on smartphones, tablets, and the cloud.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
Mobile Forensics – Advanced Investigative Strategies
Credits
Foreword
About the Authors
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface

Windows Phone 8 and 8.1 – possible for end-user devices with limitations


Windows Phone is a unique system. All three other systems are Unix-based. Apple iOS is based on BSD UNIX, Google Android is based on Linux, and BlackBerry 10 is based on QNX. Windows Phone 8/8.1, on the other hand, is based on Microsoft Windows, and shares its system architecture and the file system (NTFS).

Windows Phone 8/8.1 is a well-balanced operating system that learned a lot from Android and iOS. Somewhat similar to iOS, it offers the ability to create cloud backups (although these backups contain less information compared to iOS, with almost no application data being restored, save for login data). The OS features separate data space (sandbox) for each application and leaves no residual garbage after removing an app. However, it allows access to shared files (for example, music and videos can be played by any supported application and not just that one app the user imported the data to), which is similar to Android...