Features
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Realities of the Internet
Internet use is becoming non-stop, with modern users no longer "going online", but being connected continuously. While content was previously well deliniated by rather short dialup sessions, no internet analysis solution can afford to do batch processing anymore.
A chat session might last from minutes to several hours, with some protocols having near eternal TCP/IP connections. Can your organization afford to miss important intelligence because data is only processed once communications are "finished"?
FoxReplay Analyst is fully real-time and streaming, and will display content starting with the first packet. -
Multiplying capacity
Multiplying your interception analysis capacity
Unlike telephone intercepts, digital wiretaps often require scarce technical staff. Many Internet interception tools started life as technical packet analysers, and have only lately been made to be more user friendly. They still show their origins.
Over time, it has become clear that intelligence and police organizations need to see content and not technical detail.
The requirement of computer skills however means that the capacity for internet intercept analysis is severely constrained by the number of technical specialists.
With FoxReplay Analyst, you'll never have to miss information again because you lack the staff! -
FoxReplay VoIP
The future of the phone call
Many interception solutions come from the traditional phone universe, and have recently added support for Internet communications. FoxReplay Analyst is based on the world of IP and offers native support for VoIP.
This means that for us, VoIP is just another Internet protocol, and that FoxReplay Analyst uncovers and displays any and all interesting data exchanged, including account names, conference call events and chat conversations related to the VoIP connection.
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Bulk analysis
Fully analysing a stream of intercepted content is not always possible, nor always the right way to gather intelligence.
FoxReplay Analyst offers multiple technologies to separate the wheat from the chaff. For example, a web-page is showed once per view, and not as the potentially hundreds of HTTP sessions that form that one page.
Additionally, uninteresting content can be flagged as such, and rapidly skipped.
Mail analysis software has the ability to distinguish between spam and potentially interesting communications.
Finally, all intercepted content is full-text searcheable, no matter how it was originally transmitted. A Word document within a Zip file that was exchanged via an MSN session poses no problems.