#image-forensics
4 posts tagged
Pixels lie. The job is to make them confess. IMINT forensics is the part of imagery intelligence that doesn't care what the picture shows — it cares what the file betrays. Every edit leaves a fingerprint somewhere: in the compression grid, in the sensor noise, in a shadow that points the wrong way. A working analyst …
In December 2012 a journalist published one photo of John McAfee, on the run from Belize police. One photo. Inside the JPEG sat an unstripped GPS tag from an iPhone 4S — 15°39'29.4"N, 88°59'31.8"W — a poolside in Parque Nacional Río Dulce, Guatemala. McAfee tried to claim the data was faked. Two days later he co…
An image is rarely just an image. It's a timestamp, a location, a face, a logo on a wall, a reflection in a window — and somewhere on the public web, there's a chance it's been posted before. Reverse image search is how you make that chance work for you. Done badly, it's a single drag-and-drop into Google. Done prope…
Open-Source Intelligence is a field built on acronyms. Whether you are a journalist tracing a sanctioned vessel, a corporate due-diligence analyst chasing a beneficial owner, or a SOC analyst pivoting on indicators, you will encounter a shared vocabulary that spans military doctrine, civilian forensics, and internet pr…
