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Smartphones now power 97% of investigations, Cellebrite report finds - Bez Kabli

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Smartphones now power 97% of investigations, Cellebrite report finds Bez Kabli

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    NEWS·TECHNOLOGY Smartphones now power 97% of investigations, Cellebrite report finds February 6, 2026 by Mateusz Ługowik TEL AVIV, Feb 6, 2026, 11:22 (GMT+2) In a global survey, smartphones emerged as the leading source of digital evidence in 97% of investigations. Most respondents agreed digital evidence improves solvability but also increases workloads; agencies express interest in AI, though policies limit use. Cloud evidence-sharing is slowly gaining ground, yet portable drives and USB sticks remain the top choice, bringing custody and access concerns along with them. According to Cellebrite’s 2026 Industry Trends Report, smartphones now serve as the primary source of digital evidence in criminal probes, showing up in 97% of cases. 1 . This shift is significant since investigators now view phone data as the foundation rather than an afterthought, given how much daily life revolves around apps, messages, and location info. It’s reshaping case construction and speeding up investigations. The survey also reveals growing demands on police labs and investigative teams, just as agencies face pressure to deliver results while navigating stricter policies and governance around new technology. Cellebrite, known for its digital evidence collection and analysis tools, surveyed 1,200 practitioners across 63 countries for its seventh annual look at investigative trends. According to the report, 97% of agency managers said their communities expect digital evidence to play a role in the majority of cases. “Digital evidence is where many of our investigations start these days,” said James Howe, a detective with the Columbus, Ohio, Division of Police, in remarks featured in the report. Regarding capacity, 95% of public-safety respondents agreed that digital evidence boosts solvability. Yet, 94% also reported that growing complexity is stretching their caseloads thin. Just 62% of agency leaders indicated they are reallocating resources from traditional methods toward digital strategies. Review time emerged as the main bottleneck. Two-thirds of those surveyed pointed to it as the top hurdle in progressing cases, an issue that intensifies as investigators wade through massive amounts of messages, media files, and app data, the report stated. Artificial intelligence, or AI, caught attention as a potential solution to reduce the review workload, but it’s not accessible to everyone. According to the report, 65% of public-safety respondents believe AI could speed up investigations, yet almost a third said their agency’s policies bar its use. Governance and public consent are still delicate issues. “The relationship between the public and the police is fundamental,” said Matt Scott, a UK police and crime commissioner. He emphasized that any deployment of AI or automation must come with proper consultation and safeguards. Cloud adoption is increasing, but at a measured pace. The survey shows “receptiveness” to cloud-based digital evidence management hitting 42% in 2026, a slight rise from 38% in 2025. Yet, two-thirds of those surveyed continue to share evidence using portable hard drives and USB sticks. This is crucial since the “chain of custody” — the official log of who handled evidence and when — grows tougher to maintain as files get copied and passed between parties. The report noted this can bog down collaboration between agencies and raise the chances of access-control failures. In the private sector, 54% of respondents identified eDiscovery — the process of gathering and producing electronic records for legal cases — as the leading use case, with data theft (46%) and network exploits (44%) close behind, the report noted. “When used responsibly, AI enables teams to accelerate their work without compromising control or accountability,” said Colin Duncan, an eDiscovery technologist at law firm Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough. Cellebrite’s Chief Marketing Officer David Gee insisted the data leaves agencies with no option but to modernize. “Digital evidence is the backbone of modern justice,” he said, highlighting the growing use of the company’s Guardian evidence and case-management platform. However, the survey also highlighted hurdles that could slow the shift: policies restricting AI use, a reliance on physical media for sharing evidence, and a disconnect between acknowledging the issue and reallocating staff and budgets. If these barriers remain, investigators might deal with growing backlogs even as demand for digital-focused casework climbs. In late trading, Cellebrite’s shares on Nasdaq slipped roughly 2.5%, settling at $13.59, based on market data. References More details here Mateusz Ługowik March 16, 2026 Reckitt Benckiser Share Price Jumps After Morgan Stanley Upgrade as Investors Revisit Selloff March 16, 2026 UK Stock Market Today: FTSE 100 Closes Higher as Oil Retreat Lifts BP, Shell Ahead of BOE March 16, 2026 Australia Stock Market Today: ASX 200 Falls Again as Miners Slide Before RBA Call March 16, 2026 3i Group Stock Price Today: Why 3i Shares Fell as FTSE 100 Rose Ahead of Action Seminar Search Technology News SpaceX to launch nearly 30 Starlink satellites; jellyfish effect possible at dawn March 16, 2026, 4:26 PM EDT. SpaceX will launch the Falcon 9 rocket carrying 29 Starlink satellites from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station's SLC-40, with a four-hour window from 6:26 to 10:26 a.m. ET. If timing aligns with dawn, the exhaust plume could form a jellyfish effect cloud. The mission marks the 11th flight for booster B1090 and the 20th Florida launch this year. After stage separation, the first stage is expected to land on the drone ship A Shortfall of Gravitas in the Atlantic. The satellites will provide internet access in low Earth orbit once deployed. Dr. Jonathan McDowell of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics tracks the constellation, reporting roughly 9,996 in orbit and 7,866 in operational orbit before this launch. Latest Articles Reckitt Benckiser Share Price Jumps After Morgan Stanley Upgrade as Investors Revisit Selloff March 16, 2026 Reckitt Benckiser shares rose 2.4% to 5,484 pence Monday after Morgan Stanley upgraded the stock and set a 6,300-pence target. The gain follows a sharp drop earlier this month after the company withheld margin guidance and warned of earnings headwinds. Reckitt is running a £1 billion buyback and completed the $4.8 billion sale of Essential Home, retaining a 30% stake. FTSE 100 closed up 0.6%. UK Stock Market Today: FTSE 100 Closes Higher as Oil Retreat Lifts BP, Shell Ahead of BOE March 16, 2026 Britain’s FTSE 100 closed up 0.55% at 10,317.69 on Monday, lifted by gains in BP, Shell, and property stocks after oil prices fell. The FTSE 250 slipped 0.2% for a fourth straight loss, while Close Brothers dropped 15% after Viceroy Research revealed a short position. UK consumer sentiment hit a 14-month low, and two-year gilt yields rose sharply as traders scaled back bets on Bank of England rate cuts. Australia Stock Market Today: ASX 200 Falls Again as Miners Slide Before RBA Call March 16, 2026 Australian shares fell for a third session Monday, with the S&P/ASX 200 down 0.4% to 8,583.4 as weaker commodity prices hit miners and traders awaited the Reserve Bank’s rate decision. Mining stocks dropped 2.4%, while financials and energy gained. Brent crude traded at $100.56 a barrel. South32 slid 5.7% after halting its Mozal smelter; Perpetual rose 1.9% after selling its wealth unit to Bain Capital.
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    Mar 18, 2026
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