Ishtiaq Ahmed’s Post

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Additional Deputy Commissioner of Police at Dhaka Metropolitan Police

The best list of digital forensics tools that I have used so far to produce expert opinion! These are nothing but showcase of digital arms of cyber police to fight against high tech crimes! Digital forensics is nothing but patience & dedication to uncover the uncertainty of cyber world!

  • logo, company name
Yuri Gubanov

Digital forensics expert. Creator of Belkasoft.

9mo

Where is Belkasoft :)

Md Rayhan Miah

RHCSA | MTCNA | Cyber Crime & Digital Forensics Researcher | Junior System Administrator | IT Manager

9mo

Sir, are you still using Cellebrite?

Riccardo T.

Opsec, Osint and Web Forensics Expert working to develop tools to make the Cyber World a safer place.

9mo

Ishtiaq Ahmed I don't see tools related to #webforensics, while nowadays is very frequent to have to forensically acquire web content during an investigation. Feel free to reach out for a trial licence of Eviquire ,our Next Generation Web Forensics solution. After, I'm confident Eviquire's logo will make it into your list ;) In case you are in Delhi today, please come to see the tool in action at the International Police Expo 2024 in Delhi, we are at the mh Service booth just at the entrance.

Michael Baute

Digital Forensics / Cyber Security / Cyber Defense

9mo

Outdated and missing others. Plus you have sorta one listed three times. OpenText is the parent company of EnCase and bought Guidance software 7 years ago. So in reality it should just list EnCase and not all three. Plus missing some other key and good software. Belkasoft is one of those missing. Not sure why people even post these lists. You also have FTK listed twice as well. Exterro bought AccessData a few years ago as well.

Patrick Mazerski

Detective - High Tech Crimes Unit / DFIR Examiner / ICAC Task Force / SWAT Sniper / LE Instructor

8mo

Sorry pal, but I have to disagree with your statement. These are tools and they DO NOT produce expert opinions. The examiner, with their knowledge and experience, is how expert opinions are produced. An experienced and knowledgeable examiner using #RegRipper and #FTKImager will do circles around an examiner who only knows push-button forensics {fill in your favorite paid software} from a week long "certificate" course. Sure, you may need specialized tools for some tasks (like extracting data from a locked phone), but ultimately it's the examiner who must know what they're looking at, be able to verify the data was parsed and displayed correctly, and explain the data to a non-technical audience.

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