DEFT, a Linux distribution based on Linux kernel 3.x and the DART (Digital Advanced Response Toolkit) with the best freeware Windows Computer Forensic tools, is now at version 7.2.
There are a lot of improvements in DEFT 7.2, including tons of updates.
DEFT (Digital Evidence & Forensic Toolkit) is a fully customised Linux distro. It is easy-to-use with good hardware detection and a lot of the best open-source applications meant for incident response and computer forensics. Find out what the latest release entails...
Click here to read more | Tweet this
Organisations which allow employees to BYO computer or phone should make it a pre-condition that they are granted the right to collect a forensic image of the device when the employee leaves – or risk facing the legal consequences down the track.
I only need BT5 boot up laptop, then run the dd and wine commands.
Right now, BT5 is so big and most of it I don't need. The reason I choose BT5 is because it has the Forensic mode. Do other Linux version also have the Forensic mode?
What I want to do is to delete most items on menu and also delete the execuation programs. And create a shortcut on desktop to run my simple script.
BackTrack is a Linux distribution that is based on Ubuntu, designed for hackers and/or security professionals, and loaded with the best Free Software and Open Source penetration testing applications available.
{lang: 'en-GB'}
Unhide is a forensic tool to find hidden processes and TCP/UDP ports by rootkits / LKMs or by another hidden technique.
(...)Read the rest of Unhide - The opensource forensic tool (263 words)
© admin for Ubuntu Geek, 2012.
NeonView is a minimalist, lightweight image viewer written in C and GTK, completely free and open-source, created by TuxArena. Since it was recently launched, NeonView includes only a handful of features, but this is the base for development of new features and functionality.
My hosting provider has told me that the server harddisk that I am currently using is crashed and they failed to recover most of the data and they only managed to recover some files or folder from the crashed HDD (Less than 1%) by utilising the forensic recovery toolkit.
They claims that they have tried several methods such as ext3grep, linux rescue, fsck and multiple recovery tools but without s
Hello
My name is Karol Jelonek and I'm an assistant of Hakin9 Magazine editor the only publication devoted to IT Security.
We are looking for authors who could provide us with some interesting articles concerning EnCase (forensic software).
I believe your expertise in this matter might be very valuable to our readers and maybe you could share your knowledge with us.
If you would be i