Digital Forensics Masterclass
Learn one of the most in-demand talents in 2022 by becoming a Digital Forensics Investigator!
Description
Digital forensics is a field of
forensic science that deals with the recovery, investigation, examination, and
analysis of data found in digital devices, which is frequently used in the
context of mobile devices and computer crime. The phrase "digital
forensics" was coined as a synonym for "computer forensics," but
it has since grown to include investigations into all devices that may store
digital data. With roots in the personal computing revolution of the late 1970s
and early 1980s, the discipline evolved haphazardly during the 1990s, and
national policies did not exist until the early twenty-first century.
Digital forensics investigations
can be used for a variety of purposes. The most common is to testify in
criminal or civil court to support or dispute a notion. Theft and violence
against the person are examples of alleged violations of laws that are defined
by legislation, enforced by the police, and prosecuted by the state. Civil
cases, on the other hand, are concerned with protecting individuals' rights and
property (often associated with family disputes), but they can also be
concerned with contractual disputes between commercial entities, which may
involve a type of digital forensics known as electronic discovery (eDiscovery).
Because there were few specialists’
digital forensic tools available in the 1980s, investigators frequently did
live analysis on media, inspecting computers from within the operating system
and extracting data using existing sysadmin tools. This approach posed the
potential of mistakenly or intentionally altering data on the disk, leading to
accusations of evidence tampering. To solve the challenge, a number of tools
were developed in the early 1990s.
In both criminal law and private
investigation, digital forensics is widely used. It has traditionally been
linked to criminal law, in which evidence is gathered to support or refute a
hypothesis before the courts. This, like other fields of forensics, is
frequently part of a larger investigation involving multiple disciplines. In
other situations, the evidence gathered is used for purposes other than legal
processes, such as intelligence collection (for example to locate, identify or
halt other crimes). As a result, intelligence gathering is sometimes subjected
to a forensic standard that is less stringent.
- Investigators that are new to digital forensics
What you'll learn
- Digital Forensics Fundamentals
- Creating Digital Forensics Lab
- Investigate Volatile and Non-Volatile Memory
- Data Acquisition
- Linux
- Cyber Security
- TCP/IP
- Digital forensics LAW
- Networking
- Malware Analysis
- Evidence Analysis
- Debugging and Analysis Malware
- Mobile Forensics
- Web Browser Forensics
- And other awesome topics
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