NEW DELHI — FutureCrime Summit 2026, scheduled for August 6 and 7 in New Delhi, is set to feature mh Service as a Gold Partner, adding another technology firm to an event that has increasingly positioned itself at the intersection of cybercrime, digital investigation, law enforcement and security policy.
The company’s participation comes at a moment when digital forensics is no longer a specialist backroom function. In an era of mobile-first fraud, cloud-based evidence, platform-linked crime and transnational cyber investigations, forensic capability has become a frontline requirement for agencies trying to keep pace with the scale and complexity of digital wrongdoing.
That broader reality has helped define the role of events like the FutureCrime Summit. What was once seen largely as a conference space for discussion is now also functioning as a meeting ground for investigative technologies, enforcement priorities and the commercial infrastructure that increasingly supports both.
Digital Evidence Moves to the Core of Investigations
The case for that shift is laid out in stark terms in mh Service’s announcement.
The company says global cybercrime damages are projected to exceed $10 trillion annually, while digital evidence has become central to nearly 90 percent of modern investigations. In that environment, the company argues, conventional investigative methods are under pressure from the speed and complexity of cyber-enabled offences.
At the summit, mh Service says it will showcase its portfolio of digital forensic solutions, including mobile forensics, computer forensics and integrated DFIR platforms designed to reduce investigation time while improving accuracy and actionable intelligence.
The underlying proposition is straightforward: as cyber threats grow more sophisticated, investigators need not just isolated tools but systems capable of operating across devices, environments and evidence types. The emphasis is on faster, intelligence-driven investigation rather than slower, fragmented technical response.
Industry estimates cited by the company add weight to that claim. It says more than 80 percent of critical evidence today is digital, spanning mobile devices, cloud platforms and social media, making advanced forensic capabilities essential for law enforcement agencies worldwide.
A Make in India Pitch for Investigative Technology
In its public messaging around the summit, mh Service is also placing its participation within a wider industrial and strategic frame.
Speaking about the company’s presence at the event, Jignesh Suba, CEO South Asia, mh Service, said: “Cybercrime is evolving faster than ever, and investigators today need not just tools, but complete ecosystems that can deliver speed, accuracy, and intelligence. The FutureCrime Summit is a powerful platform to collaborate, share knowledge, and demonstrate how ‘Make in India’ forensic technologies can support agencies in solving complex digital crimes more efficiently.”
That quote captures the company’s broader positioning. It is not only presenting itself as a supplier of forensic hardware and software, but as part of a larger effort to strengthen investigative capability through locally developed or regionally adapted technology.
The company describes itself as a manufacturer of robust, high-speed forensic hardware and a global distributor of leading digital forensics software technologies. Its stated focus is on providing comprehensive solutions that accelerate digital crime investigations while maintaining reliability and trustworthiness in high-stakes forensic environments.
That positioning fits neatly into the summit’s own wider themes, which are expected to include cybercrime investigation, financial fraud, threat intelligence, artificial intelligence in security and cyber law. In all of those domains, digital evidence increasingly acts as the connective tissue.
Sponsorships and Exhibitions at Future Crime Summit 2026
The addition of mh Service as a Gold Partner also signals the summit’s continued expansion as a platform for sponsors and exhibitors looking to engage with a concentrated audience of law enforcement personnel, policymakers, technology leaders and security professionals.
Organizers say companies interested in sponsorship, exhibition opportunities, or showcasing products and services at Future Crime Summit 2026 can reach out at research@futurecrime.org.
That invitation reflects the summit’s larger role in the security ecosystem. It is not only a venue for speeches and panel discussions, but also a place where technologies, investigative methods and institutional priorities are brought into direct conversation.
As the August event approaches, partnerships such as mh Service’s suggest how the Future Crime Summit is being shaped: not simply as a forum on crime and security, but as a working arena for the tools, companies and agencies that increasingly define how digital investigations are conducted.