ADF | Best Digital Forensic News | Computer and Mobile Forensics

All New End-to-End Forensic Tool: Digital Evidence Investigator

Written by ADF Solutions | Nov 1, 2016 4:00:00 AM

ADF Solutions, a leading provider of digital forensic and media exploitation tools, has released Digital Evidence Investigator (DEI), an end-to-end solution designed to streamline digital investigations. DEI has been built from the ground up and leverages ADF's proven track record of reducing forensic backlogs.

End-to-End Digital Investigations

DEI is an innovative solution that provides an end-to-end digital investigation process, making it easier for digital examiners to collect and analyze digital evidence. This fully automated tool has been designed with speed, scalability and ease of use in mind, ensuring that users can quickly recover social media, peer-to-peer file sharing, web browsing and email data alongside other file types. This means that examiners can minimize the amount of time spent on complex configurations, manual parsing of files, or running multiple scripts.

With its highly configurable artifact and file collection capabilities, DEI is a tool that can target relevant results, so examiners can cope with increasing caseloads. Moreover, DEI is designed to work seamlessly with ADF's field-based forensic tool, Triage-Investigator, providing a forensic ecosystem that allows labs to leverage investigators to process and triage computers and digital devices.

By streamlining the digital investigation process, DEI can help organizations to reduce forensic backlogs, improve the efficiency of their investigations, and ultimately, bring faster and more accurate results. With its ease of use, scalability, and targeted results, DEI is a must-have tool for digital examiners who need to conduct efficient and effective digital investigations.

"ADF customers played a key role in providing input on and feedback into the development of this digital investigation platform," said Raphael Bousquet, CTO and co-founder, ADF Solutions. "Digital examiners need tools that can find artifacts and files fast, are highly scalable, and can target relevant results to overcome the burden of increasing caseloads."