A video surfaced on social media purporting to show a public official accepting a bribe. The lighting on the face did not match the scene’s ambient light. Amped Five’s Error Level Analysis (ELA) and Noise Correlation tools revealed that the face had been composited onto a different body—the noise pattern of the face was JPEG blocky, while the background was smooth.
A dashcam captured a hit-and-run at night. The license plate was a white blur due to motion. Using the Deconvolution tool, the analyst estimated the blur angle (45 degrees, 12 pixels long). By reversing the convolution, the plate number "6ABC-123" became readable. The defense challenged the enhancement, but the Amped Five filter chain log proved the process was mathematically sound.
A common defense attorney question is: "Did you Photoshop the evidence?" amped five forensic software
With Amped Five, the answer is no. The software creates a Processing Pipeline—a list of every action taken:
This pipeline is saved with the output image. In court, the analyst can demonstrate the original, apply each filter live, and show the result. The defense can even request the raw processing script to verify it on their own copy of Amped Five. A video surfaced on social media purporting to
Standard sharpening increases edge contrast, leading to halos and artifacts. Amped Five uses blind deconvolution algorithms that mathematically estimate the camera's motion path (point spread function) and reverse it. This is critical for license plate recovery from fast-moving vehicles or facial identification from shaky surveillance footage.
Consumer software applies changes invisibly and is not forensically sound. Amped Five operates on a non-destructive pipeline. Every change is applied mathematically, logged, and reversible. More importantly, the software does not recompress video until the final export, preserving original pixel data for authentication. This pipeline is saved with the output image
With the rise of generative AI, Amped Software is actively developing deepfake detection modules. These analyze biological signals (like inconsistent blinking or heart rate patterns via skin color variation), noise inconsistencies, and generative artifacts that human eyes miss.
Amped Five is a professional software application designed for the forensic enhancement, authentication, and analysis of digital images and video evidence. Developed by Amped Software (Trieste, Italy), it is widely used by law enforcement agencies, forensic laboratories, military intelligence, and private security firms worldwide. Unlike general-purpose photo editors, Amped Five adheres to strict forensic principles—maintaining chain of custody, preventing data alteration, and producing court-admissible results.
A video surfaced on social media purporting to show a public official accepting a bribe. The lighting on the face did not match the scene’s ambient light. Amped Five’s Error Level Analysis (ELA) and Noise Correlation tools revealed that the face had been composited onto a different body—the noise pattern of the face was JPEG blocky, while the background was smooth.
A dashcam captured a hit-and-run at night. The license plate was a white blur due to motion. Using the Deconvolution tool, the analyst estimated the blur angle (45 degrees, 12 pixels long). By reversing the convolution, the plate number "6ABC-123" became readable. The defense challenged the enhancement, but the Amped Five filter chain log proved the process was mathematically sound.
A common defense attorney question is: "Did you Photoshop the evidence?"
With Amped Five, the answer is no. The software creates a Processing Pipeline—a list of every action taken:
This pipeline is saved with the output image. In court, the analyst can demonstrate the original, apply each filter live, and show the result. The defense can even request the raw processing script to verify it on their own copy of Amped Five.
Standard sharpening increases edge contrast, leading to halos and artifacts. Amped Five uses blind deconvolution algorithms that mathematically estimate the camera's motion path (point spread function) and reverse it. This is critical for license plate recovery from fast-moving vehicles or facial identification from shaky surveillance footage.
Consumer software applies changes invisibly and is not forensically sound. Amped Five operates on a non-destructive pipeline. Every change is applied mathematically, logged, and reversible. More importantly, the software does not recompress video until the final export, preserving original pixel data for authentication.
With the rise of generative AI, Amped Software is actively developing deepfake detection modules. These analyze biological signals (like inconsistent blinking or heart rate patterns via skin color variation), noise inconsistencies, and generative artifacts that human eyes miss.
Amped Five is a professional software application designed for the forensic enhancement, authentication, and analysis of digital images and video evidence. Developed by Amped Software (Trieste, Italy), it is widely used by law enforcement agencies, forensic laboratories, military intelligence, and private security firms worldwide. Unlike general-purpose photo editors, Amped Five adheres to strict forensic principles—maintaining chain of custody, preventing data alteration, and producing court-admissible results.