Detect Edits and Tampering
We analyze waveforms, spectrograms, metadata, continuity, and more to identify edits, insertions, deletions, or manipulation. If a recording has been altered, we determine what was done and where it occurred.
When the authenticity of a recording is questioned, the truth must be verifiable. Sound Testimony® applies established forensic protocols and advanced analysis to determine whether the audio is a reliable representation of what was originally recorded.
We analyze waveforms, spectrograms, metadata, continuity, and more to identify edits, insertions, deletions, or manipulation. If a recording has been altered, we determine what was done and where it occurred.
Determining the truth is important. Whether a recording will be entered as evidence or is simply for personal clarity. In court, audio must have forensic integrity. In private matters, you also deserve to know the truth.
Voicemails, pocket-dials, and private recordings often contain fragmented or hard to discern speech. We determine whether gaps are natural or edited and whether the audio supports or contradicts statements made about it.
All calls with Sound Testimony® are confidential — your privacy comes first.
Many clients reach out when a recording raises concerns. If something sounds out of place, feels incomplete, or is being used in a legal setting, a forensic authentication examination can help determine what is accurate and what may have been changed. These are the most common situations where audio authentication becomes essential.
A recording used against you may raise concerns about accuracy or intent. If anything sounds altered or out of context, authentication helps determine whether the file was changed in ways that affect your situation.
If a recording you plan to submit may be challenged, authentication becomes essential. A forensic review confirms whether the recording is accurate or if anything was added, removed, or rearranged.
Unintentional recordings often contain gaps. Authentication clarifies whether these gaps are natural interruptions or the result of editing.
If a device or file was out of your control, authentication checks whether any changes were made during that period.
If your voice is on the recording but the content sounds inaccurate, authentication can reveal missing words, rearranged speech, or modifications.
Hearing yourself in a recording that doesn’t match your memory can be unsettling. Authentication shows whether the audio is real or if missing context, edits, or rearranged parts caused the differences.
If you are facing any of these situations, you can contact Sound Testimony for confidential guidance and support.
Contact Sound TestimonyIf you are facing any of these situations, you can contact Sound Testimony for confidential guidance and support.
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