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computer forensics
(redirected from Digital forensics)

   Also found in: Acronyms, Wikipedia 0.01 sec.
computer forensics
The investigation of a computer system believed to be involved in cybercrime. Forensic software provides a variety of tools for investigating a suspect PC. Such programs may include a function that copies the entire hard drive to another system for inspection, allowing the original to remain unaltered.

Another utility compares file extensions to the data content in order to determine if files have been camouflaged with phony file extensions. For example, an image file might be renamed as a text document and vice versa.

Network Forensics
In order to identify attacks, "network forensics" deals with the capture and inspection of packets passing through a selected node in the network. Packets can be inspected on the fly or stored on disk for later analysis. See forensically clean, slack space, write blocker, file wipe, IDS, Internet forensics and security event management software.

NIST Phases

The National Institute of Standards and Technology "Guide to Integrating Forensic Techniques into Incident Responses" covers four phases, which are briefly summarized below. For the complete 121-page NIST publication, download draft SP 800-86 at http://csrc.nist.gov/publications/nistpubs.

1 - Collection: Identify, label, record and acquire data from possible sources, while preserving the integrity of the data.

2 - Examination: Use manual and automated methods to assess and extract data of particular interest, while preserving the integrity of the data.

3 - Analysis: Use legally justifiable methods and techniques to derive useful information.

4 - Reporting: Describe actions used, explain how tools and procedures were selected, determine what other actions need to be performed, including forensic examination of additional data sources, securing identified vulnerabilities and improving existing security controls. Recommend improvements to policies, guidelines, procedures, tools and other aspects of the forensic process.
computer forensics [kəm¦pyüd·ər fə′ren·ziks]
(forensic science)
The study of evidence from attacks on computer systems in order to learn what has occurred, how to prevent it from recurring, and the extent of the damage.


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Gareth McConway, 19, a digital forensics student, from Doncaster said: "You now assume that standards will continue to improve.
Describing the new technology in the International Journal of Electronic Security and Digital Forensics, Bobby Tait and Basie von Solms of the University of Johannesburg have shed some light on how biometrics-fingerprints, iris pattern, etc.
Whether or not to launch a digital forensics investigation depends on many things: What is it the organization is trying to find, where is the evidence located, and how does an enterprise define forensics in the first place?
 
 
 
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