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Digital forensics

About: Digital forensics is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 4270 publications have been published within this topic receiving 49676 citations. The topic is also known as: digital forensic science & Digital forensics.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This paper first introduces existing major security and forensics challenges within IoT domain and then briefly discusses about papers published in this special issue targeting identified challenges.

442 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The purpose of this paper is to identify and discuss the main issues involved in the complex process of IoT-based investigations, particularly all legal, privacy and cloud security challenges, as well as some promising cross-cutting data reduction and forensics intelligence techniques.
Abstract: Today is the era of the Internet of Things (IoT). The recent advances in hardware and information technology have accelerated the deployment of billions of interconnected, smart and adaptive devices in critical infrastructures like health, transportation, environmental control, and home automation. Transferring data over a network without requiring any kind of human-to-computer or human-to-human interaction, brings reliability and convenience to consumers, but also opens a new world of opportunity for intruders, and introduces a whole set of unique and complicated questions to the field of Digital Forensics. Although IoT data could be a rich source of evidence, forensics professionals cope with diverse problems, starting from the huge variety of IoT devices and non-standard formats, to the multi-tenant cloud infrastructure and the resulting multi-jurisdictional litigations. A further challenge is the end-to-end encryption which represents a trade-off between users’ right to privacy and the success of the forensics investigation. Due to its volatile nature, digital evidence has to be acquired and analyzed using validated tools and techniques that ensure the maintenance of the Chain of Custody. Therefore, the purpose of this paper is to identify and discuss the main issues involved in the complex process of IoT-based investigations, particularly all legal, privacy and cloud security challenges. Furthermore, this work provides an overview of the past and current theoretical models in the digital forensics science. Special attention is paid to frameworks that aim to extract data in a privacy-preserving manner or secure the evidence integrity using decentralized blockchain-based solutions. In addition, the present paper addresses the ongoing Forensics-as-a-Service (FaaS) paradigm, as well as some promising cross-cutting data reduction and forensics intelligence techniques. Finally, several other research trends and open issues are presented, with emphasis on the need for proactive Forensics Readiness strategies and generally agreed-upon standards.

440 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
18 Mar 2015
TL;DR: How RAISE has been collected and organized is described, how digital image forensics and many other multimedia research areas may benefit of this new publicly available benchmark dataset and a very recent forensic technique for JPEG compression detection is tested.
Abstract: Digital forensics is a relatively new research area which aims at authenticating digital media by detecting possible digital forgeries. Indeed, the ever increasing availability of multimedia data on the web, coupled with the great advances reached by computer graphical tools, makes the modification of an image and the creation of visually compelling forgeries an easy task for any user. This in turns creates the need of reliable tools to validate the trustworthiness of the represented information. In such a context, we present here RAISE, a large dataset of 8156 high-resolution raw images, depicting various subjects and scenarios, properly annotated and available together with accompanying metadata. Such a wide collection of untouched and diverse data is intended to become a powerful resource for, but not limited to, forensic researchers by providing a common benchmark for a fair comparison, testing and evaluation of existing and next generation forensic algorithms. In this paper we describe how RAISE has been collected and organized, discuss how digital image forensics and many other multimedia research areas may benefit of this new publicly available benchmark dataset and test a very recent forensic technique for JPEG compression detection.

440 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
01 Aug 2005
TL;DR: Borrowing and extending tools from the field of computer vision, it is described how the direction of a point light source can be estimated from only a single image, and the efficacy of this approach in real-world settings is shown.
Abstract: When creating a digital composite of, for example, two people standing side-by-side, it is often difficult to match the lighting conditions from the individual photographs. Lighting inconsistencies can therefore be a useful tool for revealing traces of digital tampering. Borrowing and extending tools from the field of computer vision, we describe how the direction of a point light source can be estimated from only a single image. We show the efficacy of this approach in real-world settings.

381 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is explained why corpora are needed to further forensic research, a taxonomy for describing corpora is presented, and the availability of several forensic data sets are announced.

373 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
20243
2023205
2022552
2021267
2020339
2019343