Saturday 15 March 2008

3G Phonebook

our friends at QUANTAQ have just updated their SUBSCRIBER IDENTITY MODULE (a.k.a. the humble "SIM card") analysis toolkit - USIM-DETECTIVE v2. This is a powerful tool to allow evaluation of the registers and ephemeral data stored upon SIMs, suport for 3G (USIM) devices, option to view acquired information (including phonebook contacts and numbers, SMS text messages, deleted text messages, call records) and structure the data into a number of different report formats.

Monday 10 March 2008

Cell Site Analysis Evidence

CSA evidence is the practice of providing location based information about a given mobile telecommunication device (typically a humble mobile phone).

Interesting ruling from the Northern Ireland Court of Appeal in the matter of THE QUEEN v RICHARD DAVID McCARTAN and BARRY DAVID SKINNER - which was reported in the press back in 2002 as the 'Sports Car Murder'

Simply put, the courts took the view that the appellants' failure to provide some form of explanation as to why their mobile telephone were in a given locale, ultimately undermine their own appeal which rested heavily on CSA evidence (para 38).

Sunday 9 March 2008

Freemasons Hall

Free expert lecture on computer evidence at the Freemasos Hall in Manchester on the 12th March 2008. Contact Lincoln House Chambers to reserve a place. secret handshake optional.

Expert Lecture @ No5 Chambers London

Last week we ran a highly successful expert lecture at the London set of No5 Chambers. Set on the sixth floor of a building overlooking the surrounding city as the sun began to set, the venue could not have been better. The session explored the science of 'cell site analysis' - determining the relative location of a given mobile communication device - and was attended by over sixty leading lights from the solicitor and advocate communities.

e-Crime gets politicial

At the recent e-Crime Congress the Shadow Home Secretary discussed the new Green Paper calling for action and powerful change in relation to e-crime. Over 500 top law enforcement officials from around the world plus the Heads of Security for much of the City of London and the remaining UK-based-multi-nationals were in attendance.

Presently the state spends only £3.5 million on the 58 staff of SOCA E-Crime directorate (non-classified answer to a direct question from the Home Affairs Select Committee). Compare this to the £4.5 billion cost of the national ID card scheme...

Quoting another well known political party - "things can only get better!"