Stage 1: Network-capable initial analysis products for first responders, such as Guidance's EnCase Enterprise Edition and Technology Pathway's ProDiscover. These two products can acquire drive images remotely in a live environment, and their use eliminates the need for the Stage 2 tools. . • Stage 2: Primary analysis and drive-image acquisition. This stage usually entails obtaining the hard disk of a suspect machine and investigating it in a controlled (not live) environment. AccessData Forensic Toolkit, Encase Forensic Edition and the open-source Sleuth Kit fit this stage. Any one can be used as the primary investigative tool in environments that don't require a network-capable acquisition application. All these products can acquire a full sector-by-sector drive image of any hard disk under investigation; additional sleuthing functionality varies by application. • Stage 3: Fine-grained keyword searches through disk or partition contents, e-mail-specific searches or Internet history analysis. Paraben's NetAnalysis, E-Mail Examiner and Net E-Mail Examiner, and dtSearch's dtSearch excel here. These tools operate on disk images created by any of the applications from Stages 1 or 2. The link for this article located at Marisa Mack is no longer available. . • Stage 2: Primary analysis and drive-image acquisition. This stage usually entails obtaining the . stage, network-capable, initial, analysis, products, first, responders, guidance's, encase. . Joe Shakespeare
Moving beyond merely monitoring employees' Internet use, many of the nation's largest companies are quietly assembling teams of computer investigators who specialize in covertly copying employees' hard drives and combing them for evidence of workplace wrongdoing. These high-tech investigators employ tools . . . . Moving beyond merely monitoring employees' Internet use, many of the nation's largest companies are quietly assembling teams of computer investigators who specialize in covertly copying employees' hard drives and combing them for evidence of workplace wrongdoing. These high-tech investigators employ tools and techniques that originally were devised for law enforcement to catch criminals but that are now spreading rapidly in the private sector at Microsoft, Disney, Boeing, Motorola, Fluor, Caterpillar and dozens of other major companies. The development, little known outside the narrow community of corporate security experts, is sure to raise tensions over workplace privacy in an age when the lives of millions of workers are inextricably tied to their office computers. Employers say that their rush into the field known as "computer forensics" is a matter of self-defense, that being able to retrieve computer evidence is essential to their ability to catch employees engaged in everything from spending too much time surfing the Internet to stealing company secrets. The link for this article located at Lexis-Nexis is no longer available. . Organizations utilize digital investigation techniques to oversee staff activities, creating privacy issues and altering office relationships.. Employee Surveillance, Corporate Investigations, Digital Forensics. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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