http://www.nextgov.com/nextgov/ng_20111024_7468.php By Aliya Sternstein Nextgov 10/24/2011 The Commodity Futures Trading Commission is searching for a phone hacking tool to investigate suspects' mobile devices for evidence of links to Ponzi schemes, insider trades and other illicit dealings. With Americans' increasing reliance on smartphones, evidence of fraud often can be found in phonebook contacts, call history logs, text messages and locational data, according to computer forensics experts. The commission charged with policing the $600 trillion market of derivatives transactions is surveying industry for systems that can collect evidence in the field and in the lab, so ideally, the equipment would not rely on a PC, according to an Oct. 19 sources sought notice. CFTC already uses extraction tools that work on specific phone models such as the Apple-compatible BlackLight system, but it now wants a "comprehensive solution" that can copy files from any wireless model. Currently, handheld mobile forensics field kits that don't require a laptop cost between $8,000 and $15,000, according to Darren R. Hayes, a computer information systems program chairman at Pace University. The school was recently awarded a Defense Department grant for work on mobile forensics. He estimates the type of device CFTC needs would cost roughly $20,000. [...] _____________________________________________________ Subscribe to InfoSec News - www.infosecnews.org http://www.infosecnews.org/mailman/listinfo/isnReceived on Mon Oct 24 2011 - 23:09:07 PDT
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