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Journal ArticleDOI

Music piracy, universities and the Australian Federal Court: Issues for forensic computing specialists

TLDR
The article considers the implications of this case for the forensic computing domain and highlights the need for the development of standard frameworks for the conduct of forensic computing investigations, and briefly presents the framework proposed by the European project ‘CTOSE’ (Cyber Tools On-line Search for Evidence).
About
This article is published in Computer Law & Security Review.The article was published on 2005-01-01. It has received 6 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Judgement & Digital evidence.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Winning the Battles, Losing the War? Rethinking Methodology for Forensic Computing Research

TL;DR: The need to reconceptualise the term ‘solution’ is suggested and an additional methodological step is advocated for the development of a framework to map the value propositions of, and interrelationships between the individual sets of responses within the dynamically evolving FC landscape.
Journal ArticleDOI

Technical, legal and ethical dilemmas: distinguishing risks arising from malware and cyber-attack tools in the `cloud'--a forensic computing perspective

TL;DR: The paper considers how the differences between indiscriminate malware and targeted cyber-attack tools further problematize the capacity of organisations to manage risk, and differentiates between technical, legal and ethical dilemmas posed.
Journal Article

Copyright, Crime and Computers: New Legislative Frameworks for Intellectual Property Rights Enforcement

TL;DR: In this article, the authors consider IPR enforcement from the perspective of criminal law, and in particular, drawing on recent Australian legislative reforms concerning copyright, cybercrime, covert investigations, mutual assistance and extradition, prosecution and sentencing options, as well as proceeds of crime recovery.

'Riding furiously in all directions' - implications of uncoordinated technical, organisational and legal responses to illegal or inappropriate on-line behaviours

Broucek, +1 more
TL;DR: This research paper adopts an e-forensic approach to examine the interrelatedness between technical, organisational and legal responses to the challenges posed by illegal or inappropriate on-line behaviour and argues that the future developments must be focused on integrated solutions that balance the interests for security, legal admissibility and privacy in ways that are calibrated to address the dynamic and multi-faceted nature of the forensic computing domain.
Journal ArticleDOI

Considerations for e-forensics: insights into implications of uncoordinated technical, organisational and legal responses to illegal or inappropriate on-line behaviours

TL;DR: An e-forensic approach is adopted to examine the links between technical, organisational and legal responses to the challenges posed by illegal or inappropriate on-line behaviour and argues that future developments must be focused on integrated and balanced solutions that are calibrated to address the dynamic and multi-faceted nature of the forensic computing domain.
Related Papers (5)