Linux Today: Linux News On Internet Time.
Search Linux Today
search.internet.com
Linux News Sections:  Blog -  Developer -  High Performance -  Infrastructure -  IT Management -  Security -  Storage -
Linux Today Navigation
LT Home
Preferences
Contribute
Link to Us
Search
Linux Jobs

Become a Marketplace Partner

internet.commerce
Be a Commerce Partner














The Linux Channel at internet.com
Linux Today
Enterprise Linux Today
Apache Today
JustLinux.com
Linux Planet
PHPBuilder
All Linux Devices
Technology Jobs

JustTechJobs.com

LinuxToday Newsletters
Subscribe News
Subscribe PR
Subscribe Security

internet.com
IT
Developer
Internet News
Small Business
Personal Technology

Search internet.com
Advertise
Corporate Info
Newsletters
Tech Jobs
E-mail Offers

 






Current Newswire:

An example of the awesomeness of the open source community

Berry Linux 1.01 Is Based on Fedora 12

Red Hat CEO Says Innovation Trumps Cost Savings

Hacker Disables More Than 100 Cars Remotely

Benchmarks: Mandriva 2010.1, PCLinuxOS 2010, Ubuntu 10.04, openSUSE 11.3

If Dreams Were Real: Convergence of Distro and Kernel Versions

Linux Mint 8 LXDE CE Review: LXDE Done Right

Week 2, Day 7 of SCO v. Novell Trial - More McBride and Botosan Opens a Door - Updated

Social media privacy: Insurance companies want access to your Facebook

Novell Mono project bringing Silverlight to Apple iPhone




Systems Engineer Sr – Solaris – Linux – Logical Domains (CO)
Next Step Systems
US-CO-Thornton

Justtechjobs.com Post A Job | Post A Resume
:To Catch a Thief
To Catch a Thief
Jul 30, 2008, 01 :00 UTC (0 Talkback[s]) (4367 reads)

(Other stories by Nils Magnus, Achim Leitner, Joe Casad)

"This month’s cover story explores the world of computer forensics. We’ll show you some tools the experts use to find clues, recover deleted files, and root out hidden evidence. We start with a study of the open source Sleuth Kit forensics toolkit. We also look at Foremost and Scalpel – a pair of tools for finding and restoring deleted files. We show you how to examine Windows disks with Linux tools, and we end with a look at the Open Computer Forensics Architecture, a freely available collection of forensics tools and libraries developed for the Dutch police."

Complete Story

Related Stories:
Undeleted: Carving Tools Help You Recover Deleted Files(Jul 24, 2008)
Linux Tool Speeds Up Computer Forensics for Cops(Mar 08, 2008)
Net/FSE: free network forensic search engine(Jan 23, 2008)
Computer Forensics: Linux Style!(Oct 15, 2007)
DesktopLinux: Security-Oriented Linux Live CD Achieves Major Release(Mar 12, 2007)
SecurityFocus: Wireless Forensics: Part One--Tapping the Air(Jan 04, 2007)



No talkbacks posted.
  Home | Search Talkbacks | Customize View    Top of Page  



Enter your comments below:

* Your Name:

* Your Email Address:

* Subject:

CC: [will also send this talkback to an E-Mail address]

* Comments:

Tags allowed:<I>,<B> and <U>. See our talkback-policy for more about talkback content.

Fields marked with * are required!






..............................




All times are recorded in UTC.
Linux is a trademark of Linus Torvalds.
Powered by Linux, Apache and PHP


The Network for Technology Professionals

Search:

About Internet.com

Legal Notices, Licensing, Permissions, Privacy Policy.
Advertise | Newsletters | E-mail Offers