4 research outputs found
Extending the advanced forensic format to accommodate multiple data sources, logical evidence, arbitrary information and forensic workflow
Forensic analysis requires the acquisition and management of many different types of evidence, including individual disk drives, RAID sets, network packets, memory images, and extracted files. Often the same evidence is reviewed by several different tools or examiners in different locations. We propose a backwards-compatible redesign of the Advanced Forensic Formatdan open, extensible file format for storing and sharing of evidence, arbitrary case related information and analysis results among different tools. The new specification, termed AFF4, is designed to be simple to implement, built upon the well supported ZIP file format specification. Furthermore, the AFF4 implementation has downward comparability with existing AFF files
A general strategy for differential forensic analysis
DFRWS 2012, Aug. 6-8, 2012, Washington, DC.The article of record as published may be found at http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.diin.2012.05.003Refereed Conference PaperThe dramatic growth of storage capacity and network bandwidth is making it increasingly
difficult for forensic examiners to report what is present on a piece of subject media.
Instead, analysts are focusing on what characteristics of the media have changed between
two snapshots in time. To date different algorithms have been implemented for performing
differential analysis of computer media, memory, digital documents, network
traces, and other kinds of digital evidence. This paper presents an abstract differencing
strategy and applies it to all of these problem domains. Use of an abstract strategy allows
the lessons gleaned in one problem domain to be directly applied to others.Portions of this work were funded by NSF Award DUE-0919593
