Cyber Crime and Forensic Computing : Modern Principles, Practices, and Algorithms / ed. by Gulshan Shrivastava, Deepak Gupta, Kavita Sharma.
Contributor(s): Agarwal, Prerna [contributor.] | Arora, Shefali [contributor.] | Bhatia, M. P. S [contributor.] | Garg, Puneet [contributor.] | Gupta, Deepak [contributor.] | Gupta, Deepak [editor.] | Gupta, Swati [contributor.] | Hariharan, K [contributor.] | Kumar, Ambeshwar [contributor.] | Kumar, Prashant [contributor.] | Kumar, Sachil [contributor.] | Kumari, Meet [contributor.] | Manikandan, R [contributor.] | Meenakshi [contributor.] | Mittal, Ruchi [contributor.] | Purohit, Gaurav [contributor.] | Rajkumar, K [contributor.] | Raju, Solomon [contributor.] | Saxena, Geetika [contributor.] | Selvakumari, R. Shantha [contributor.] | Sharma, Anand [contributor.] | Sharma, Kavita [contributor.] | Sharma, Kavita [editor.] | Shrivastava, Gulshan [editor.] | Shrivastava, Pranav [contributor.] | Sivasankari, N [contributor.] | Tanwar, Pramod [contributor.].
Material type: BookSeries: De Gruyter Frontiers in Computational Intelligence , 11.Publisher: Berlin ; Boston : De Gruyter, [2021]Copyright date: ©2021Description: 1 online resource (X, 230 p.).Content type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9783110677478.Subject(s): Algorithmus | Big Data | Computerforensik | Forensische Informatik | Künstliche Intelligenz | Maschinelles Lernen | COMPUTERS / Intelligence (AI) & SemanticsAdditional physical formats: No title; No titleOther classification: ST 300 Online resources: Click here to access online | Click here to access online | Cover Issued also in print.Frontmatter -- Contents -- About the editors -- A survey of popular digital forensic tools -- An insight review on multimedia forensics technology -- An overview on advanced multimedia forensic techniques and future direction -- Computer forensics and Cyber Crimes: COVID-19 perspective -- Biometric forensic tools for criminal investigation -- Deep learning for optimization of e-evidence -- Electronic voting machine security issues and solution protocol by physical unclonable function -- Machine learning for mobile malware analysis -- Mobile platform security: issues and countermeasures -- Data leakage detection in Wi-Fi networks -- Index
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This book presents a comprehensive study of different tools and techniques available to perform network forensics. Also, various aspects of network forensics are reviewed as well as related technologies and their limitations. This helps security practitioners and researchers in better understanding of the problem, current solution space, and future research scope to detect and investigate various network intrusions against such attacks efficiently. Forensic computing is rapidly gaining importance since the amount of crime involving digital systems is steadily increasing. Furthermore, the area is still underdeveloped and poses many technical and legal challenges. The rapid development of the Internet over the past decade appeared to have facilitated an increase in the incidents of online attacks. There are many reasons which are motivating the attackers to be fearless in carrying out the attacks. For example, the speed with which an attack can be carried out, the anonymity provided by the medium, nature of medium where digital information is stolen without actually removing it, increased availability of potential victims and the global impact of the attacks are some of the aspects. Forensic analysis is performed at two different levels: Computer Forensics and Network Forensics. Computer forensics deals with the collection and analysis of data from computer systems, networks, communication streams and storage media in a manner admissible in a court of law. Network forensics deals with the capture, recording or analysis of network events in order to discover evidential information about the source of security attacks in a court of law. Network forensics is not another term for network security. It is an extended phase of network security as the data for forensic analysis are collected from security products like firewalls and intrusion detection systems. The results of this data analysis are utilized for investigating the attacks. Network forensics generally refers to the collection and analysis of network data such as network traffic, firewall logs, IDS logs, etc. Technically, it is a member of the already-existing and expanding the field of digital forensics. Analogously, network forensics is defined as "The use of scientifically proved techniques to collect, fuses, identifies, examine, correlate, analyze, and document digital evidence from multiple, actively processing and transmitting digital sources for the purpose of uncovering facts related to the planned intent, or measured success of unauthorized activities meant to disrupt, corrupt, and or compromise system components as well as providing information to assist in response to or recovery from these activities." Network forensics plays a significant role in the security of today's organizations. On the one hand, it helps to learn the details of external attacks ensuring similar future attacks are thwarted. Additionally, network forensics is essential for investigating insiders' abuses that constitute the second costliest type of attack within organizations. Finally, law enforcement requires network forensics for crimes in which a computer or digital system is either being the target of a crime or being used as a tool in carrying a crime. Network security protects the system against attack while network forensics focuses on recording evidence of the attack. Network security products are generalized and look for possible harmful behaviors. This monitoring is a continuous process and is performed all through the day. However, network forensics involves post mortem investigation of the attack and is initiated after crime notification. There are many tools which assist in capturing data transferred over the networks so that an attack or the malicious intent of the intrusions may be investigated. Similarly, various network forensic frameworks are proposed in the literature.
Issued also in print.
Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web.
In English.
Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 28. Feb 2023)
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