Moving back home was probably the wisest thing I've ever done. Unahama kwenu na hujafukuzwa?? Unaenda kuteseka kulipa rent and what not na kila kitu iko nyumbani?? Hapa labda nikuje nitolewe na bibi na familia yake wakituletea mahari😂😂😂
They told us that God watched from a throne above the clouds, keeping score, judging thoughts, dividing the worthy from the unworthy. Writing our names in a book.Those going to heaven and those going to hell…
As a man ,make sure that kutoka block forever inakupa pressure, sukari ,arthritis, gout, etc... yaaani kichwa inafaaa kuwa moto karibu inapasuka uko figure out how utatoka block in a big way na iwe permanent
Bikers crossing Suguta Valley came face to face with gun-wielding locals wanting a ride on their superbikes. Often called the “Valley of Death,” Suguta is a volatile region in northern Kenya, notorious for banditry and cattle rustling.
(Courtesy Time Master)
What I Found Extracting My Own Twitter Logs
Let me show you something most people have no idea is even possible but it actually is.
During a forensic extraction I performed on my own device, something interesting happened again:
every single application log was pulled out including X(Twitter).
But today, let’s focus on just X(Twitter), because what I found is wild.
Inside the analyzed folder of the Twitter logs, the extraction revealed numerous posts I made on X(Twitter) that contained images or videos specifically those created on the same device being examined.
I’m not talking about just seeing the media.
I’m talking about pulling out the full file itself plus every tiny detail attached to it:
•The exact image/video file
•File name
•Original file path
•Size of the media
•Date created
•Date modified
•Date accessed
•Width & height of the media
•File format
But here’s the part that stood out the most…
I checked the Date Created of few of the extracted files, then opened my Twitter profile to compare.
The date and time the file was created in the report matched the exact date and time I posted it on Twitter.
That means:
•Even if you delete the original file
•Even if you clear your gallery
•Even if you wipe your Twitter drafts
The logs still quietly store traces that link your posts to the exact moment and media used to create them.
This is huge for digital forensic investigators.
Why?
Because:
•It verifies whether a post was genuinely made by the device owner
•It shows exact timestamps without relying on what’s visible on Twitter
•It retrieves original media details, even when the user thinks they deleted them
•It helps confirm device ownership, intent, and timeline reconstruction
And remember, this was pulled only from application logs, and not device media folders because I delete these media as soon as I make these posts to save space.
I added screenshots and a video screen recording showing:
1️⃣ The extracted media file with its original creation timestamp
2️⃣ My Twitter profile showing the post date both matching perfectly.
People really underestimate how much their apps silently record.
If your device ever finds itself in a forensic lab, your digital footprints will speak louder than you think.
Follow @elormkdaniel for more
How to 100% erase files from your system in a way forensic team can’t recover it (video is finally out )
Watch and give me your feedback on this method