Yeah, what BJ said.
)
I have been reading some very interesting articles regarding Corporate Forensic Readiness Planning. A recent author is Robert Rowlingson Ph.D.
Another one was by John Patzakis, the Chief Legal Officer at Guidance Software.
I have been reading some very interesting articles regarding Corporate Forensic Readiness Planning. A recent author is Robert Rowlingson Ph.D.
Another one was by John Patzakis, the Chief Legal Officer at Guidance Software.
LINKS
Do not know if the decision has been made on the interviewee. I vote for Casey or Bill Nelson.
Haven't forgotten about this, thanks for the further input.
Jamie
What about some chaps from the UK?
Craig Wilson
Paul Sanderson
Both good suggestions (and already on my list!)
Cheers,
Jamie
Could you edit your original post, on occasion, by adding the suggestions so far?
Thx,
I'd like to see an interview with forensic chicks. Babes of investigations.
All kidding, and jokes about dd aside…
I wouldn't mind hearing the female perspective on auditing, interviewing, questioning, ethics and what are the noticeable differences.
Obviously not just CF, but some of the other elements too.
For example, Cynthia Cooper, the whistleblower from MCI World Com. She is an accomplished auditor with a very interesting story.
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Another person who is a good speaker (male…but he popped into my mind). Sam Antar.
If you lived in the US during the 1980's you may have heard of "Crazy Eddie's." Sam was the CFO and perpetrated much of the fraud. He gives an interesting talk on what makes a good auditor.
He may also give an interesting interview, he didn't charge anything when I heard him speak….he educates people as part of his service to the community.
Skip
> I'd like to see an interview with forensic chicks. Babes of investigations.
That's actually a really good suggestion. Don't get me wrong, I'm not suggesting that this become the title of a new calendar…but from the very beginning of my time in infosec, I have met few women in the field. The ones I have met have been diligent, dedicated and possessed a professionalism that far surpassed many of the men they worked with. For me, as a team leader, this was a God-send, particularly when it came to completing work for clients.
> I'd like to see an interview with forensic chicks. Babes of investigations.
That's actually a really good suggestion. Don't get me wrong, I'm not suggesting that this become the title of a new calendar…but from the very beginning of my time in infosec, I have met few women in the field. The ones I have met have been diligent, dedicated and possessed a professionalism that far surpassed many of the men they worked with. For me, as a team leader, this was a God-send, particularly when it came to completing work for clients.
Good question? I asked a question? Wasn't that more of a demand?
Did you see the request for an interview with Cynthia Cooper? Or an interview with faudster, Sam Antar?
Skip
lol