Collecting Network Evidence
The traditional focus of digital forensics has been on locating evidence on a potentially compromised endpoint. More specifically, computer forensics is largely focused on a system’s storage. Law enforcement officers interested in criminal activity such as fraud or child exploitation can find the evidence required for prosecution on a single hard drive. In the realm of incident response, however, it is critical that the focus extends far beyond a suspected compromised system. For example, there is a wealth of information that can be obtained within the hardware and software in question, along with the flow of traffic from a compromised host to an external Command-and-Control (C2) server.
This chapter focuses on the preparation, identification, and collection of evidence that is commonly found among network devices and along traffic routes within an internal network. This collection is critical during incidents where an external threat source is...