What Can You Tell Us About Your Password? A Contextual Approach

Aikaterini: I’m Aikaterini Kanta. I’m a PhD candidate with University College Dublin, and I’m really glad to be here today. I’m going to talk to you about my PhD research. So, about contextual based decryption. So, the average number of

Global Incident Response: DFRWS-EU Keynote, 2022

Chris Hargreaves: Without further ado, we can start the formal program and I’ll hand over to Serge Droz – I did my best there – for the first keynote of the week. Thank you. Serge: So, this technology is working.

DFRWS APAC

28th September 2022 @ 8:00 am – 30th September 2022 @ 5:00 pm Australia/Adelaide; Virtual DFRWS is a non-profit, volunteer organization dedicated to bringing together everyone with a legitimate interest in digital forensics to address the emerging challenges of our

DFRWS USA

11th July 2022 @ 4:00 pm – 14th July 2022 @ 10:00 pm Virtual DFRWS is a non-profit, volunteer organization dedicated to bringing together everyone with a legitimate interest in digital forensics to address the emerging challenges of our field.

DFRWS-EU 2022: The Future of Digital Forensics Is Now

An analog clock superimposed on a blue background showing hexadecimal code
Moving digital forensics forward in terms of methods and frameworks, as well as organizational and cross-cultural collaboration, was an overarching theme of this year’s European Union edition of the Digital Forensics Research Workshop (DFRWS).  After 40 years, mainstays like file

Leveraging Intel DCI for Memory Forensics

A small circuit board is connected to a larger circuit board via cabling
Hello, and welcome to my DFRWS US 2021 talk about leveraging Intel DCI for memory forensics. My name is Tobias Latzo and I’m in the security research group of the Friedrich-Alexander University Erlangen-Nürnberg in Germany, which is led by Felix

Malware Family Classification Via Efficient Huffman Features

Hello everyone. My name is Steven O’Shaughnessy, and I’m a lecturer from the Technological University in Dublin. And on behalf of my colleague, Frank Breitinger from the University of Lausanne and myself, I am presenting our paper entitled malware family

Computer Forensic Reference Data Sets For Digital Evidence

Rick: Good morning. My name is Rick Ayres, I’m the project lead for the Computer Forensics Tool Testing project at NIST. My talk today is going to provide an overview on updates to our Computer Forensics Reference Data Sets project,