Dark Cyber, December 19, 2017, Now Available
December 19, 2017
Dark Cyber (a new series from Stephen E Arnold, publisher of Beyond Search) provides an insider’s look at Oxygen Forensic Detective. The December 19, 2017, video explains what information can be extracted from a mobile computing device by investigators. The Detective software includes a function which can identify, extract, and organize contacts from the mobile device and from cloud services to which the device owner connected. The investigator can then click to see the most frequently called contacts and display the location of individuals on a digital map.
Stephen E Arnold said:
Individuals who engage in high-risk behaviors lack a good understanding of the information which can be pulled from a mobile computing device. Oxygen Forensic Detective is one example of the remarkable investigative and analytic tools now in active use in more than 100 countries by enforcement and intelligence personnel.
He added:
Detective is able to extract high-value information from messaging applications as well as more than 5,000 separate programs which run on a mobile computing device. Oxygen Forensics’ technical team releases frequent updates which allows Detective users to keep pace with rapid technical changes in the mobile computing sector.
The December 19, 2017, Dark Cyber program also reveals that Wikipedia has a Dark Web presence. The Dark Cyber research team notes that when high-value sites make their content available on the Dark Web, that content acts like a magnet to pull new users to the obfuscated Tor environment.
The program concludes with news that 18 Bitcoin ATM machines will be online and available in Atlanta, Georgia. A Bitcoin ATM makes it easier to convert digital Bitcoin into hard cash in the form of US dollars.
You can view this week’s video at this link.
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Dark Cyber, December 19, 2017, Now Available : Stephen E. Arnold @ Beyond Search