The Center for Cybercrime Studies John Jay College of Criminal Justice Presents
File Carving for Forensics Recovery
Nasir Memon - Professor of Computer Science
Director of the Information Systems and Internet Security (ISIS) Lab Polytechnic Institute of New York University
As the number of digital devices in use continues to increase, there has also been an increase in the seizure and analysis of digital data for forensic purposes. One of the areas of high forensic interest is in the recovery of digital data from devices. In cases where the file system information for a digital device is missing or corrupt, newer data recovery techniques involving a process known as file carving are used to recover the data. This talk describes the need for and evolution of file carving, and presents the various technologies that have been used to improve file carving recovery, including our own Smart Carving techniques.
DateTuesday, February 9, 2010
Time Reception – 145pm, Lecture – 200 pm
Location
Room 630T, Haaren Hall
899 Tenth Avenue, New York City 10019
(Harren Hall is on 10th Avenue, between 58th and 59th Streets)
RSVP Nicole Daniels at 212-237-8920 or email ndaniels @ jjay.cuny.edu
For additional information please contact Professor Doug Salane, Director of the Center for Cybercrime Studies, at 212-237-8836 or email dsalane@jjay.cuny.edu
Douglas E. Salane
Director, Center for Cybercrime Studies
Mathematics & Computer Science Dept.
John Jay College of Criminal Justice
The City University of New York
(212) 237-8836
Do you know if there is a cost associated with attending?
If not, I probably take the train up there . . .
There is no cost for this event. If anyone would like to meet up before, after or during please PM or use the contact information on my profile.
Anyone else going to this besides me? I would enjoy meeting up either before or after for a cup of tea.
this was an interesting presentation into some new way of combining existing methodologies and statistics to carve documents, in particular images out.
I will write a bit more when I am less grouchy, but how about a tool that can carve an image where there are more than two fragments, and the fragment which contains the image header is already over-written?