Intellectual Solutions

Cyber Forensic

Cyber forensics, also known as digital forensics, is the process of identifying, collecting, analyzing, and preserving digital evidence from computers, networks, and electronic devices. It helps investigate cybercrimes such as hacking, data breaches, and online fraud. Experts use specialized tools to recover deleted or hidden data while maintaining legal standards. Cyber forensics plays a crucial role in ensuring justice and strengthening cybersecurity.

day-to-day operations

Empowering Excellence: Our IT Solutions Story

Securely creating a forensically sound, bit-by-bit copy of digital evidence without altering the original data.

Thorough examination of acquired data to uncover hidden evidence, patterns, and digital traces.

Delivering clear, court-admissible documentation of findings with accurate technical and legal insights..

Working Process

Our Digital Investigation Process

Every cyber forensic investigation comes with unique technical and legal challenges. From handling compromised systems to preserving digital evidence without altering it, precision is critical. Our approach focuses on identifying the root cause, securing affected systems, and maintaining proper chain-of-custody for all digital assets.

    FAQ

    Frequently asked questions

    Cyber Forensics (also known as Digital Forensics) is the process of identifying, collecting, analyzing, and preserving digital evidence from computers, mobile devices, servers, and cloud systems. It helps investigate cybercrimes, data breaches, fraud, and other digital incidents.
    You should consult a cyber forensic expert if you experience a data breach, hacking attempt, ransomware attack, internal fraud, email compromise, or any suspicious digital activity. Early investigation helps preserve critical evidence and prevent further damage.
    Yes, in many cases deleted files, emails, chat records, and other digital data can be recovered using specialized forensic tools — provided the data has not been permanently overwritten.
    Yes. When collected and preserved properly following legal procedures and chain-of-custody standards, digital evidence can be presented in court and used in legal proceedings.
    The timeline depends on the complexity of the case, the number of devices involved, and the amount of data to be analyzed. Simple cases may take a few days, while complex investigations can take several weeks.