Authenticated Evidence of What Was Posted, When, and by Whom.

Defamation, harassment, stalking, doxing, anonymous online conduct, and other internet-based harms produce evidence that disappears, gets edited, or gets denied. Forensically sound capture — with provenance and attribution analysis — is what makes that evidence usable in civil and criminal proceedings.

The Forensic Questions We Answer

What the evidence record actually addresses.

Web & Social Media Capture

  • Forensically defensible captures of public web pages and social posts
  • Authenticated content visible only when logged in (with appropriate authorization)
  • Preservation of metadata, server response data, and visual rendering
  • Time-stamped captures suitable for evidentiary use

Authentication & Provenance

  • Analysis of account creation patterns and platform-side history
  • Linkage analysis across accounts believed to share an operator
  • Attribution evidence from technical artifacts
  • Demonstration of authenticity to defeat 'deepfake' or 'edited' objections

Disappearing & Ephemeral

  • Capture and preservation of stories, status posts, and auto-deleting content
  • Snapchat, Instagram, and other platforms with ephemeral features
  • Recovery from caches, archives, and third-party preservation services

Stalking, Harassment & Threats

  • Comprehensive capture across platforms where conduct is occurring
  • Timeline reconstruction tying conduct to specific actors
  • Coordination with law enforcement preservation requests where appropriate
Why Screenshots Aren't Enough

The authentication problem — and how we solve it.

A screenshot is the easiest evidence to challenge. It can be edited. It can be fabricated. It can have its metadata stripped. Forensically sound capture preserves the full technical record of how the content was retrieved, server-side response data tying the capture to the platform, visual rendering and underlying source together, and a documented chain of custody from capture through production.

Why Counsel Retains Us

Court-tested in this kind of matter.

Our principal has written and presented widely on the forensic challenges of social media and web-based evidence, including the published article Social Media Forensics: Preservation, Collection, and Authentication Challenges. He has also addressed device-side artifacts that corroborate web and social media evidence in IoT Gadgets: Exploring the New Sources of Discoverable Evidence (Law.com Legaltech News).

Have a matter that requires this kind of forensic work?