What Do Incident Response Practitioners Need To Know? A Skillmap for the Years Ahead

Okay, good afternoon. My name is Radek Hranincký. I’m currently finishing my PhD at Brno University of Technology in the Czech Republic. And together with my colleagues from different corners of Europe, we made this paper called “What do in… Continue reading What Do Incident Response Practitioners Need To Know? A Skillmap for the Years Ahead

Lecturer Jade James on Her DFIR Career Transition From Lab to Academia

Christa: Among the many decisions a digital forensics professional will make in their career, whether to pursue a graduate degree is among the biggest. Costs in time, and sometimes money, factor in, as well as how a degree could shape… Continue reading Lecturer Jade James on Her DFIR Career Transition From Lab to Academia

Coffee Forensics: Reconstructing Data in IoT Devices Running Contiki OS

Hi, my name is Jens-Petter Sandvik and I’m a PhD student at Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU for short). In addition to trying to finish a PhD, I’m working for the Norwegian police in the national cyber crime &hell… Continue reading Coffee Forensics: Reconstructing Data in IoT Devices Running Contiki OS

Time Well Spent: Precision Timing, Monotonic Clocks, and the PowerLogs Database for iOS

Hello, and welcome to our talk on Time Well-Spent: Precision Timing, Monotonic Clocks, and the PowerLogs Database for iOS.

As you might’ve guessed, we both work for Magnet Forensics, and this is the story of our research journey through … Continue reading Time Well Spent: Precision Timing, Monotonic Clocks, and the PowerLogs Database for iOS

How Human Factors Confound and Enrich Digital Forensics: The November-December Research Roundup

Human complexity lies at the heart of so much of digital forensics – both the artifacts that offer insights into people’s motives, means, and opportunity to commit wrongdoing, and the investigations that reveal them.

Our research roundup for the end… Continue reading How Human Factors Confound and Enrich Digital Forensics: The November-December Research Roundup

The Potential of Digital Traces in Providing Evidence at Activity Level

Hello. My name is Hans Henseler from the University of Applied Sciences Leiden. I’m going to present about ‘The Potential of Digital Traces in Providing Evidence at Activity Level’. This presentation is based by work together with professio… Continue reading The Potential of Digital Traces in Providing Evidence at Activity Level

Magnet Forensics’ Stephen Boyce on Collaboration, Automation, and Developing DFIR Skills

Christa Miller: As digital technology becomes more embedded into humans’ everyday lives, enhancing our efficiency at work, our social lives, even our health and movements, it likewise facilitates criminal activity. Growing in volume and complex… Continue reading Magnet Forensics’ Stephen Boyce on Collaboration, Automation, and Developing DFIR Skills