Computer forensics
By: SHAHA DIN

Computer Forensics World is a growing community of professionals involved in the digital forensics industry. It is an open resource, free for all to access and to use. It strongly encourages the sharing of information and peer to peer assistance.

Computer forensics is a branch of forensic science pertaining to legal evidence found in computers and digital storage mediums. Computer forensics is also known as digital forensics.

The goal of computer forensics is explain something about the current state of a digital artifact. The term digital artifact can include a computer system, a storage media (such as a hard disk or CD-ROM), an electronic document (e.g. an email message or JPEG image), or even a sequence of packets moving over a computer network. The explanation can be as straightforward as what information is here? and as detailed what is the sequence of events responsible for this current arrangement of bits?

There are many reasons to employ the techniques of computer forensics:

* In legal cases, computer forensic techniques are frequently used to analyze computer systems belonging to defendants (in criminal cases) or litigants (in civil cases). * To recover data in the event of a hardware or software failure. * To analyze a computer system after a break-in, for example, to determine how the attacker gained access and what the attacker did. * To gather evidence against an employee that an organization wishes to terminate. * To gain information about how computer systems work for the purpose of debugging, performance optimization, or reverse-engineering.

Special measures should be taken when conducting a forensic investigation if it is desired for the results to be used in a court of law. One of the most important measures is to assure that the evidence has been accurately collected and that there is a clear chain of custody from the scene of the crime to the investigator---and ultimately to the cour. Computer forensics