Sommaire

  • Cet exposé a été présenté le 31 janvier 2020.

Description

  • Orateur

    Ben Martini (University of South Australia)

The discipline of digital forensics, or as it was then known ‘forensic computing’, began with a focus on retrieving admissible evidence from computer systems (typically personal computers). However, with the increased pervasiveness of connected digital technologies in the last 20 years, a wide variety of new and complex sources of digital evidence have emerged. This has presented a range of opportunities and challenges for forensic practitioners.In this presentation, I will discuss a selection of digital forensics research that I have conducted, with my colleagues and collaborators, in areas such as cloud forensics, mobile forensics and Internet of Things (IoT) forensics. We will look at the challenges of identifying, preserving, collecting and analysing evidence from these platforms, along with proposed solutions, and discuss the applicability of these techniques to the challenges of the next decade. 

Prochains exposés

  • CHERIoT RTOS: An OS for Fine-Grained Memory-Safe Compartments on Low-Cost Embedded Devices

    • 21 novembre 2025 (11:00 - 12:00)

    • Inria Center of the University of Rennes - Room Markov

    Orateur : Hugo Lefeuvre - The University of British Columbia

    Embedded systems do not benefit from strong memory protection, because they are designed to minimize cost. At the same time, there is increasing pressure to connect embedded devices to the internet, where their vulnerable nature makes them routinely subject to compromise. This fundamental tension leads to the current status-quo where exploitable devices put individuals and critical infrastructure[…]
    • SoSysec

    • Compartmentalization

    • Operating system and virtualization

    • Hardware/software co-design

    • Hardware architecture

Voir les exposés passés