5,065 research outputs found
Medical Cyber-Physical Systems Development: A Forensics-Driven Approach
The synthesis of technology and the medical industry has partly contributed
to the increasing interest in Medical Cyber-Physical Systems (MCPS). While
these systems provide benefits to patients and professionals, they also
introduce new attack vectors for malicious actors (e.g. financially-and/or
criminally-motivated actors). A successful breach involving a MCPS can impact
patient data and system availability. The complexity and operating requirements
of a MCPS complicates digital investigations. Coupling this information with
the potentially vast amounts of information that a MCPS produces and/or has
access to is generating discussions on, not only, how to compromise these
systems but, more importantly, how to investigate these systems. The paper
proposes the integration of forensics principles and concepts into the design
and development of a MCPS to strengthen an organization's investigative
posture. The framework sets the foundation for future research in the
refinement of specific solutions for MCPS investigations.Comment: This is the pre-print version of a paper presented at the 2nd
International Workshop on Security, Privacy, and Trustworthiness in Medical
Cyber-Physical Systems (MedSPT 2017
Dark clouds on the horizon:the challenge of cloud forensics
We introduce the challenges to digital forensics introduced by the advent and adoption of technologies, such as encryption, secure networking, secure processors and anonymous routing. All potentially render current approaches to digital forensic investigation unusable. We explain how the Cloud, due to its global distribution and multi-jurisdictional nature, exacerbates these challenges. The latest developments in the computing milieu threaten a complete “evidence blackout” with severe implications for the detection, investigation and prosecution of cybercrime. In this paper, we review the current landscape of cloud-based forensics investigations. We posit a number of potential solutions. Cloud forensic difficulties can only be addressed if we acknowledge its socio-technological nature, and design solutions that address both human and technological dimensions. No firm conclusion is drawn; rather the objective is to present a position paper, which will stimulate debate in the area and move the discipline of digital cloud forensics forward. Thus, the paper concludes with an invitation to further informed debate on this issue
Using smartphones as a proxy for forensic evidence contained in cloud storage services
Cloud storage services such as Dropbox, Box and SugarSync have been embraced by both individuals and organizations. This creates an environment that is potentially conducive to security breaches and malicious activities. The investigation of these cloud environments presents new challenges for the digital forensics community.
It is anticipated that smartphone devices will retain data from these storage services. Hence, this research presents a preliminary investigation into the residual artifacts created on an iOS and Android device that has accessed a cloud storage service. The contribution of this paper is twofold. First, it provides an initial assessment on the extent to which cloud storage data is stored on these client-side devices. This view acts as a proxy for data stored in the cloud. Secondly, it provides documentation on the artifacts that could be useful in a digital forensics investigation of cloud services
Recovering Residual Forensic Data from Smartphone Interactions with Cloud Storage Providers
There is a growing demand for cloud storage services such as Dropbox, Box,
Syncplicity and SugarSync. These public cloud storage services can store
gigabytes of corporate and personal data in remote data centres around the
world, which can then be synchronized to multiple devices. This creates an
environment which is potentially conducive to security incidents, data breaches
and other malicious activities. The forensic investigation of public cloud
environments presents a number of new challenges for the digital forensics
community. However, it is anticipated that end-devices such as smartphones,
will retain data from these cloud storage services. This research investigates
how forensic tools that are currently available to practitioners can be used to
provide a practical solution for the problems related to investigating cloud
storage environments. The research contribution is threefold. First, the
findings from this research support the idea that end-devices which have been
used to access cloud storage services can be used to provide a partial view of
the evidence stored in the cloud service. Second, the research provides a
comparison of the number of files which can be recovered from different
versions of cloud storage applications. In doing so, it also supports the idea
that amalgamating the files recovered from more than one device can result in
the recovery of a more complete dataset. Third, the chapter contributes to the
documentation and evidentiary discussion of the artefacts created from specific
cloud storage applications and different versions of these applications on iOS
and Android smartphones
Digital Forensics Investigation Frameworks for Cloud Computing and Internet of Things
Rapid growth in Cloud computing and Internet of Things (IoT) introduces new vulnerabilities that can be exploited to mount cyber-attacks. Digital forensics investigation is commonly used to find the culprit and help expose the vulnerabilities. Traditional digital forensics tools and methods are unsuitable for use in these technologies. Therefore, new digital forensics investigation frameworks and methodologies are required. This research develops frameworks and methods for digital forensics investigations in cloud and IoT platforms
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Multi-aspect, robust, and memory exclusive guest os fingerprinting
Precise fingerprinting of an operating system (OS) is critical to many security and forensics applications in the cloud, such as virtual machine (VM) introspection, penetration testing, guest OS administration, kernel dump analysis, and memory forensics. The existing OS fingerprinting techniques primarily inspect network packets or CPU states, and they all fall short in precision and usability. As the physical memory of a VM always exists in all these applications, in this article, we present OS-Sommelier+, a multi-aspect, memory exclusive approach for precise and robust guest OS fingerprinting in the cloud. It works as follows: given a physical memory dump of a guest OS, OS-Sommelier+ first uses a code hash based approach from kernel code aspect to determine the guest OS version. If code hash approach fails, OS-Sommelier+ then uses a kernel data signature based approach from kernel data aspect to determine the version. We have implemented a prototype system, and tested it with a number of Linux kernels. Our evaluation results show that the code hash approach is faster but can only fingerprint the known kernels, and data signature approach complements the code signature approach and can fingerprint even unknown kernels
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