Excire Forensics — |work|

She submitted her findings. The official was cleared. The “leaker” admitted to fabricating the image using a face from a public speech two years prior.

Lena documented everything. Excire automatically generated a detailed forensic report with visual heatmaps, confidence scores, and a step-by-step explanation of each anomaly — courtroom-ready.

The Last Verified Frame

Lena wasn’t done. She ran Excire’s Error Level Analysis (ELA). The face glowed bright white against the dim room — a classic sign of digital tampering. Then she used the Clone Detection module. It highlighted a perfect circular patch on the wall behind the man’s shoulder: a logo had been crudely erased and blended.

From then on, every manipulated image they encountered — deepfakes, doctored evidence, fake news — met the same fate. Excire didn’t just find forgeries. It restored trust in the one thing investigators needed most: a true picture of reality. Excire Forensics is useful not because it’s magic, but because it reveals the invisible mathematical inconsistencies left behind by any manipulation — helping professionals separate fact from fiction when the truth matters most. excire forensics

Detective Lena Moss had spent fifteen years working digital forensics, but the case on her screen felt different. A leaked photograph had surfaced online — a grainy image of a government official in a room he had sworn he never entered. If real, it would topple an administration. If fake, it would ruin an innocent man’s life.

That’s when Lena opened .

The image’s metadata had been scrubbed clean. No GPS, no camera model, no timestamp. Traditional tools hit a wall.