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Digital Forensics and Incident Response

You're reading from   Digital Forensics and Incident Response Incident response techniques and procedures to respond to modern cyber threats

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2020
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781838649005
Length 448 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
Concepts
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Author (1):
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Gerard Johansen Gerard Johansen
Author Profile Icon Gerard Johansen
Gerard Johansen
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Table of Contents (22) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Foundations of Incident Response and Digital Forensics
2. Understanding Incident Response FREE CHAPTER 3. Managing Cyber Incidents 4. Fundamentals of Digital Forensics 5. Section 2: Evidence Acquisition
6. Collecting Network Evidence 7. Acquiring Host-Based Evidence 8. Forensic Imaging 9. Section 3: Analyzing Evidence
10. Analyzing Network Evidence 11. Analyzing System Memory 12. Analyzing System Storage 13. Analyzing Log Files 14. Writing the Incident Report 15. Section 4: Specialist Topics
16. Malware Analysis for Incident Response 17. Leveraging Threat Intelligence 18. Hunting for Threats 19. Assessment 20. Other Books You May Enjoy Appendix

Understanding forensic imaging

Having a solid understanding of the facets of forensic imaging is important for incident response analysts. Having an understanding of the tools, techniques, and procedures involved ensures that evidence is handled properly and that analysts have confidence in the evidence they've acquired. In addition, understanding the necessary terminology allows analysts to accurately prepare reports and testify as to their findings if the need arises.

One of the first concepts that should be understood is the difference between forensic imaging and copying. Copying files from a suspect hard drive or other medium only provides analysts with the actual data associated with that file. Imaging, on the other hand, allows the analyst to capture the entire drive. This includes areas such as slack space, unallocated space, and possibly access deleted files. Imaging...

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