- #BITCASA ACQUISITION FULL#
- #BITCASA ACQUISITION PC#
- #BITCASA ACQUISITION OFFLINE#
- #BITCASA ACQUISITION WINDOWS#
#BITCASA ACQUISITION WINDOWS#
Live data extraction is supported for over 9000 models running iOS, Android, Windows Phone 8, Windows Mobile 5/6, Blackberry, Symbian, Bada, and models based on the Chinese MTK chipset and feature phones. Incorporating over twenty extraction methods, Oxygen Forensic® Passware® Analyst can obtain evidence via live data acquisition, backups and images, as well as extract information from the cloud. The toolkit supports a wide range of mobile devices, and allows fully automated acquisition, extraction and analysis of supported devices. Oxygen Forensic® Passware® Analyst helps mobile forensic specialists acquire, decrypt and analyze data from a variety of mobile devices such as cell phones, smartphones, tablet PCs, communicators and PDA. Oxygen Forensic® Extractor for Clouds is available in the registered customer’s area. Authentication is required to get access to the cloud data.
#BITCASA ACQUISITION PC#
It allows to import and save data on PC from Google account, Apple iCloud, Microsoft Live and other cloud services like Dropbox, Box and BitCasa. Oxygen Forensic® Passware® Analyst also enables to gain access to a great variety of other cloud data with the bundled Oxygen Forensic® Extractor for Clouds utility. Reports produced with Oxygen Forensic® Passware® Analyst are conveniently laid out and may be used as court evidence.
#BITCASA ACQUISITION FULL#
The downloaded data presents the full iOS backup as a complete evidence set including all call, messaging and browsing history, the entire file system, applications, geolocation and deleted data, and much more. In this update, the product adds iCloud backup to its more than 20 extraction methods.
#BITCASA ACQUISITION OFFLINE#
Oxygen Forensic® Passware® Analyst can acquire information from a wide range of platforms and a great deal of individual models, supports acquisition and data extraction from live devices and device images, offline and cloud backups. All versions of iOS, including the latest 8.1, are supported. The backups are downloaded and automatically imported into Oxygen Forensic® Passware® Analyst. “Our hope is that everybody in the Bitcasa extended family – including our partners and end-users – feels as if they reaped some benefit, however small, from this remarkable and intense experience,” he wrote.Oxygen Forensic® Passware® Analyst acquires full iPhone, iPad and iPod Touch backups from iCloud provided that the Apple ID credentials are known. Even so, Taptich seems to feel that Bitcasa did at least something right over the course of its lifetime, though it wasn’t clear precisely what. To cap it all off, the company failed miserably in its efforts to come up with a compelling cloud storage offer for its business customers, losing out to more capable rivals such as Box Inc. The company gave customers just 30 days to move their files or lose them forever, prompting outrage from disgruntled users on this Reddit thread. Then, in April 2015, the company irked customers a second time when it said it was killing off its consumer-focused Bitcasa Drive service so it could focus on serving business customers instead. Strangely, it blamed both low demand and some customers for “abusing” the service by trying to take full advantage of the promised unlimited storage. Despite that positive start, things quickly fell apart for Bitcasa, which was forced to announce back in 2014 that it was ending its unlimited storage plan. The five-year-old company began its life as a single-user platform offering unlimited cloud storage in 2011, getting lots of attention at a TechCrunch conference and raising about $21 million in venture capital funding in its first two years from Horizons Ventures, Pelion Venture Partners and others. The confusing circumstances of Bitcasa’s demise are perhaps a fitting end for a company that excelled at confusing its customers time and again. had acquired Bitcasa for an undisclosed price. Adding to the confusion is the fact that Venturebeat last week reported that Intel Corp. But Taptich’s final message that the company is “no more” is nonetheless somewhat cryptic, as he says “this is not bad news.” He claims that the company has become “a part of something much, much bigger” that will allow it to “eliminate the storage and computing limitations of your connected devices, however small.” He neglected to provide any further details. has bailed out of the game for good, according to a blog post by ex-Chief Executive Officer Brian Taptich. Cloud storage firm Bitcasa bites the dust as it shuts down all servicesĬloud storage operator Bitcasa Inc.