Lee Reiber
Director of Mobile Forensics
AccessData
Unfortunately the forensic examination of a mobile phone has taken a backseat to “push-button” forensics. With smart phones now dominating the market, reliance on the "easy button" presents an even greater risk of missing critical evidence. Couple that with the fact that many examiners do not approach these smarts devices as mobile computers, and you've got the beginnings of a trend in which bad habits and lack of best practices put forensic examiners at a disadvantage during an investigation. The forensic landscape has changed to include several niche tools in an attempt to deal with this new type of mobile evidence, but is that really the answer?
When faced with multiple digital devices from notebooks to PCs to Macintosh and now smartphones at a collection scene, should we have to analyze smart devices in a niche tool that is not compatible with the solution we use to analyze other digital evidence? By relying on disparate tools, don't we lose the ability to correlate valuable evidence? In this session, Lee Reiber will illustrate how integrated analysis of multiple mobile devices and computers can make all the difference in an investigation.
Participants will learn how integrated analysis of multiple mobile devices and computers can make all the difference in an investigation.