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Guide to Network Security 1st Edition Chapter Twelve Digital Forensics Objectives Explain how U.S. law enforcement and the U.S. legal system affect digital forensics Describe the roles and responsibilities of digital forensic team membe...

Guide to Network Security 1st Edition Chapter Twelve Digital Forensics Objectives Explain how U.S. law enforcement and the U.S. legal system affect digital forensics Describe the roles and responsibilities of digital forensic team members List the steps involved in collecting digital evidence Discuss the process used to analyze evidence Explain how encryption can thwart digital forensic analysis © 2013 Course Technology/Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved 2 Introduction Computer forensics – Use of technical investigation and analysis techniques to collect, preserve, and analyze electronic evidence Digital forensics – Applies to all modern electronic devices © 2013 Course Technology/Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved 3 Legal Matters Prosecution – Most important outcome of digital forensics process Various aspects of U.S. legal system influence digital forensics process Important to understand how to interact with law enforcement personnel © 2013 Course Technology/Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved 4 Search and Seizure Private sector requirements to search an employee’s computer – Employee was made aware of organizational policy establishing possibility of search – Search has legitimate business reason – Search has specific focus and is constrained to that focus – Organization has clear ownership to container in which the material was discovered – Search is authorized by the responsible manager © 2013 Course Technology/Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved 5 Interacting with Law Enforcement Must notify authorities when incident violates civil or criminal law – Appropriate agency depends on type of crime – Example: FBI handles computer crimes categorized as felonies State, county, and city law enforcement agencies – Better equipped for processing evidence than business organizations – Prepared to handle warrants and subpoenas © 2013 Course Technology/Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved 6 Interacting with Law Enforcement (cont’d.) Disadvantages of involving law enforcement – Loss of control of the chain of events – Long delays in resolution due to heavy caseloads or resource shortages – Organizational assets can be removed, stored, and preserved as evidence Involving law enforcement unnecessary if organization simply wants to reprimand or dismiss an employee © 2013 Course Technology/Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved 7 Adversarial Legal System U.S. legal system is adversarial in nature – Parties attempt to prove own views are correct – Everything is open to challenge by opposing counsel Methods used in collecting evidence will be challenged – Ensures all parties “follow the rules” © 2013 Course Technology/Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved 8 Digital Forensics Team Team of experts responsible for translating a real- world problem into questions to be answered by digital forensic analysis First response team – Assesses location, identifies sources of relevant digital evidence, and collects and preserves evidence Analysis and presentation team – Analyzes the collected information to identify material facts relevant to the investigation © 2013 Course Technology/Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved 9 First Response Team Size and makeup of team varies based on organization size Roles and duties – Incident manager Identifies sources of relevant information and produces photographic documentation – Scribe or recorder Produces written record of team’s activities and maintains control of field evidence log and locker – Imager Collects copies or images of digital evidence © 2013 Course Technology/Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved 10 First Response Team (cont’d.) Incident manager prioritizes collected evidence – Guiding principles: value, volatility, and effort required Incident manager photographs equipment to be removed – Imager sets up equipment and begins imaging items – Image hash information is documented in the record – Image is logged into the field evidence locker Team returns items to the scene after imaging © 2013 Course Technology/Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved 11 Analysis Team Analysis performed by specially trained digital forensics personnel Tasks – Recover deleted files – Reassemble file fragments – Interpret operating system artifacts Larger organizations may divide functions – Forensic examiner – Forensic analyst – Subject matter expert (if required) © 2013 Course Technology/Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved 12 Analysis Team (cont’d.) Presentation – Creating forensic reports – Present investigation’s findings Documentation should be easily understood by the audience (judge and jury) – Communicate highly technical matters without sacrificing critical details – Analogies often used © 2013 Course Technology/Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved 13 Dedicated Team or Outsource? Factors affecting decision to employ in-house investigatory team or outsource – Size and nature of the organization – Available resources – Cost Tools, hardware, staffing, and training – Response time Outside consultant needs time to get up to speed – Data sensitivity Outside consultant may have access to highly sensitive information © 2013 Course Technology/Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved 14 Forensic Field Kit Prepacked field kit – Also known as a jump bag – Contains portable equipment and tools needed for an investigation Equipment in the kit should never be borrowed – Always ready to respond See Figure 12-1 for example of a forensic field kit © 2013 Course Technology/Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved 15 Figure 12-1 Example of a forensic field kit © Cengage Learning 2013 © 2013 Course Technology/Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved 16 Forensic Field Kit (cont’d.) Example forensic field kit contents – Dedicated laptops with multiple operating systems – Call list with subject matter experts – Mobile phones with extra batteries and chargers – Hard drives, blank CDs, DVDs, and thumb drives – Imaging software or hardware – Forensic software and tools to perform data collection and analysis – Ethernet tap to sniff network traffic © 2013 Course Technology/Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved 17 Forensic Field Kit (cont’d.) Example forensic field kit contents (cont’d.) – Cables to provide access to other devices – Extension cords and power strips – Evidence bags, seals, permanent markers for storing and labeling evidence – Digital camera with photographic markers and scales – Incident forms, notebooks, and pens – Computer toolkit with spare screws, anti-static mats and straps, mirrors, lights, and other equipment © 2013 Course Technology/Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved 18 Digital Forensics Methodology Digital investigation begins with allegation of wrongdoing Authorization is sought to begin investigation – Public sector: search warrant – Private sector: affidavit, or other form specified by organization’s policy © 2013 Course Technology/Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved 19 Figure 12-2 Flow of a digital investigation © Cengage Learning 2013 © 2013 Course Technology/Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved 20 Assessing the Scene Assess the scene and document its state: – Before evidence collection begins Assessment process – Interviewing key contacts – Documenting the scene as it is Typical tools used – Photography – Field notes © 2013 Course Technology/Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved 21 Assessing the Scene (cont’d.) Photographic evidence – Plays a major role in documenting evidence Digital camera best practices – Sterilize the media card by formatting to destroy existing content – Set the camera’s clock to ensure accurate recorded dates/times – Take the first exposure of a “begin digital photography” marker to make media self- documenting © 2013 Course Technology/Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved 22 Assessing the Scene (cont’d.) Digital camera best practices (cont’d.) – Make an “end of photography” exposure – Remove card from the camera, place it in a static bag, and seal in an evidence envelope – Do not make hashes of digital photographs until the first time the evidence envelope is opened Field notes – Purpose: help investigators remember key aspects of the scene – See Figures 12-3 through 12-6 for example forms © 2013 Course Technology/Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved 23 Figure 12-3 Scene sketch form Figure 12-4 Field activity log form © Cengage Learning 2013 © Cengage Learning 2013 © 2013 Course Technology/Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved 24 Figure 12-5 Field evidence log form Figure 12-6 Photography log form © Cengage Learning 2013 © Cengage Learning 2013 © 2013 Course Technology/Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved 25 Acquiring the Evidence Organization’s IR policy spells out procedures for initiating investigative process – Obtain authorization to conduct an investigation – Private organization can be sued if investigation proves groundless Collect digital evidence – Identify sources of evidentiary material – Authenticate the evidentiary material – Collect the evidentiary material – Maintain a documented chain of custody © 2013 Course Technology/Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved 26 Acquiring the Evidence (cont’d.) Identifying sources – Can be complex in the digital world Data collection may involve: – Hundreds of gigabytes of information – A wide variety of devices Volatile information – Contents of a computer’s memory – Currently challenging to capture without sacrificing information on disk © 2013 Course Technology/Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved 27 Acquiring the Evidence (cont’d.) Authenticating evidentiary material – Must be able to demonstrate data is a true and accurate copy of the original Authentication method: cryptographic hash – Data is fed through the hash function – Fixed size output results – Infeasible that another input could produce the same output value as a given input – Hash value is recorded with the digital evidence – Two commonly used hashes: MD-5 and SHA-1 © 2013 Course Technology/Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved 28 Acquiring the Evidence (cont’d.) Collecting evidence – Live acquisition Collecting evidence from a currently running system – Dead acquisition Powering down the system to copy data from the hard drives Important to make no changes to the evidence – Labels and seals are crucial Media used to collect digital evidence must be forensically sterile – Contains no residue from previous use © 2013 Course Technology/Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved 29 Acquiring the Evidence (cont’d.) Live acquisition – Investigator uses a trusted set of CD-based tools – Stand-alone tools can also be used – Live response tools modify the state of the system Renders hard drive information inadmissible in a legal proceeding Windows Forensic Toolchest (WFT) – Driver script that identifies and lists running processes, active network connections, and other activity – Saves output on external media © 2013 Course Technology/Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved 30 Figure 12-10 Integrity checks from WFT © Cengage Learning 2013 © 2013 Course Technology/Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved 31 Figure 12-11 Hash generation of evidence from WFT © Cengage Learning 2013 © 2013 Course Technology/Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved 32 Acquiring the Evidence (cont’d.) Examples of situations that require live acquisition – Running server – Logs State is changing on a continual basis – PDAs and cellular phones Could continue to receive calls or be accessed wirelessly To prevent: block wireless access using a Faraday Cage © 2013 Course Technology/Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved 33 Acquiring the Evidence (cont’d.) Dead acquisition often used with: – Computer disks – Thumb drives – Memory cards – MP3 players Investigator seeks to obtain a forensic image of disk or device – Includes active files and directories and deleted files and file fragments © 2013 Course Technology/Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved 34 Figure 12-14 Small portion of a file system © Cengage Learning 2013 © 2013 Course Technology/Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved 35 Acquiring the Evidence (cont’d.) Bit-stream (sector-by-sector) copying – Used when making a forensic image of a device – Copies all sectors on the suspect drive Tools used – Specialized hardware tools Generally faster than software tools – Software running on a computer © 2013 Course Technology/Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved 36 Figure 12-15 Intelligent Computer Solutions’ ImageMaSSter © Cengage Learning 2013 © 2013 Course Technology/Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved 37 Acquiring the Evidence (cont’d.) Write blockers – Blocks any write requests the laptop might generate – Allows read requests – Ensures information on the suspect media is not changed accidentally The imaging process – Document origin and description of disk media – Ensure forensically sterile media for imaging – Connect suspect media to the imaging setup © 2013 Course Technology/Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved 38 Acquiring the Evidence (cont’d.) The imaging process (cont’d.) – Calculate and record baseline cryptographic hash of suspect media – Perform a bit-stream image of the suspect media – Calculate and record hash of the target – Compare the hashes to verify they match – Package the target media for transport © 2013 Course Technology/Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved 39 Acquiring the Evidence (cont’d.) Maintaining a chain of custody – Purpose: protecting evidence from accidental or purposeful modification – Legal record of where the evidence was at each point in its lifetime – Document each and every access to evidence Field investigator usually maintains personal custody of sealed item until logged into evidence storage room © 2013 Course Technology/Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved 40 Figure 12-19 Sample chain of custody log © Cengage Learning 2013 © 2013 Course Technology/Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved 41 Acquiring the Evidence (cont’d.) Proper storage – Controlled temperature and humidity – Freedom from strong electrical and magnetic fields – Protection from file and other physical hazards © 2013 Course Technology/Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved 42 Analyzing Evidence First step in analysis: obtain evidence from the storage area – Make a copy for analysis – Return original to storage Major tools in forensic analysis – EnCase Forensic from Guidance Software – Forensic Toolkit from AccessData © 2013 Course Technology/Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved 43 Searching for Evidence Identifying relevant information – Important task FTK preprocessing – Constructs index of terms found on the image – Results available under the Search tab FTK also allows searching on user-specified terms EnCase offers flexible search interface – Includes predefined filters for common items © 2013 Course Technology/Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved 44 Figure 12-20 FTK’s processing step © Cengage Learning 2013 © 2013 Course Technology/Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved 45 Reporting the Findings Findings must be reported in a written presentation – And often in legal testimony Report audiences – Upper management – Forensic expert retained by the opposition – Attorneys, judges, and juries – Other professionals Prepare a single report – Summarizes detailed records contained in the case file, analyst’s notebooks, and other documentation © 2013 Course Technology/Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved 46 Encryption Concerns Retrieving information can pose a threat to privacy and confidentiality of information assets Encrypted information can present challenges to forensic investigators – Common encryption method destroys key when user powers down or logs off Data unreadable without the key Encrypted information may exist in unencrypted form in temporary work files or the paging file © 2013 Course Technology/Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved 47 Summary Computer forensics uses investigation and analysis techniques to identify, collect, preserve, and analyze electronic evidence First response team secures and collects the devices or media – Analysis and reporting done later by specially trained forensic analysts When incident violates law, organization is required to inform law enforcement Forensic tools can be used to obtain deleted information © 2013 Course Technology/Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved 48

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