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Practical Digital Forensics

You're reading from   Practical Digital Forensics Get started with the art and science of digital forensics with this practical, hands-on guide!

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2016
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781785887109
Length 372 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Concepts
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Author (1):
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Richard Boddington Richard Boddington
Author Profile Icon Richard Boddington
Richard Boddington
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Table of Contents (12) Chapters Close

Preface 1. The Role of Digital Forensics and Its Environment 2. Hardware and Software Environments FREE CHAPTER 3. The Nature and Special Properties of Digital Evidence 4. Recovering and Preserving Digital Evidence 5. The Need for Enhanced Forensic Tools 6. Selecting and Analyzing Digital Evidence 7. Windows and Other Operating Systems as Sources of Evidence 8. Examining Browsers, E-mails, Messaging Systems, and Mobile Phones 9. Validating the Evidence 10. Empowering Practitioners and Other Stakeholders Index

Processes and forensic tools to assist practitioners to deal more effectively with these challenges

In sharp contrast to imaging, targeted live recovery using forensically sound tools and processes is possible. Evidence is sought and not altered by the searching process in that the file data and metadata remain unaltered. Recovered data is collected in a forensically sound and password-protected evidence container. E-discovery tools have been heralding this change—a change I predict will spill over into criminal evidence recovery processes.

E-discovery evidence recovery and preservation

Recent developments in the technology available for undertaking e-discovery are now signaling a paradigm shift away from the cumbersome existing processes used to capture and identify digital evidence. For companies involved in civil litigation, there is an increase in electronic discovery involving the capture of relevant digital information for evidentiary purposes.

Existing processes involve technologies...

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