We would like to invite anyone interested in the area of Browser Forensics to join our group on LinkedIn called "Browser Forensics - Tools, News and Advancements".
This group will facilitate vendor neutral discussions and the distribution of technical information and news related to the investigation and forensic analysis of Internet browser artifacts.
We encourage our group members to post new information and engage in spirited discussions on this topic.
Contributors to the group include Craig Wilson, a recognized expert in the field of Internet history extraction.
Valuable information is posted regularly. Topics include
Firefox v4
Analyzing Apple Safari Artifacts
New Browser RockMelt
Analysis of Private Browsing Modes in Modern Browsers
We invite all LinkedIn members on the Forensic Focus Forum to join this group.
Cheers,
…Arthur
Greetings,
Further fragmenting discussions….
-David
Yes Dave, but it's a sub-sub fragmentation.
You would have to be a member of LinkedIn, and then Browser forensics.
To me it would seem to serve you and the community as a whole much better posting your "browser forensics" items here. This site is viewed by far more than "browser forensics" so you will get more feedback and replies.
See an informative research paper posted in the LinkedIn Group "Browser Forensics - Tools, News and Advancements".
Web Browser Session Restore Forensics
– A valuable record of a user’s internet activity for computer forensic examinations
"Each session of activity in a Mozilla browser is recorded by the browser so that in the event of the browser crashing the session can be restored. Session Restore saves all open windows and tabs, width, height, and position of each window, scroll position within each scrollable area in each window, history of closed tabs and windows, cookies, text typed in forms and information to restart downloads. It is possible to recover multiple versions of this information in order to show a user’s internet activity. Other browsers also have the facility to restore a previous session."
See an informative research paper posted in the LinkedIn Group "Browser Forensics - Tools, News and Advancements".
Web Browser Session Restore Forensics
– A valuable record of a user’s internet activity for computer forensic examinations
"Each session of activity in a Mozilla browser is recorded by the browser so that in the event of the browser crashing the session can be restored. Session Restore saves all open windows and tabs, width, height, and position of each window, scroll position within each scrollable area in each window, history of closed tabs and windows, cookies, text typed in forms and information to restart downloads. It is possible to recover multiple versions of this information in order to show a user’s internet activity. Other browsers also have the facility to restore a previous session."
Browser Forensics - Tools, News and Advancements
In the real world a quick Google found this….
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No need to login to another social network and then ask to join a group.
Much easier.