Abstract

Recent legislative changes following the enactment of the Budapest Convention on Cybercrime have created thorny issues for both technical digital forensics experts and legal professionals alike. New requirements have surfaced in the area of data preservation, and forensics workers are also finding themselves subject to new guidelines in the formatting, presentation and analysis of data gathered from target devices. Dario Forte explores the complex world of digital forensics, focusing particularly on the rules outlined in RFC 3227, a document with important ramifications for evidence collection and archiving in digital environments. During the past three years, the lack of data on individual workstations necessary for response measures has become an increasing concern. The data have instead been distributed to a number of different points.

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