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Computer Forensics, Privacy & the Law
Tags >> enterprise forensics

According to an exclusive report in the conservative journal The Washington Times, the National Science Foundation experienced a six-fold increase in employee misconduct investigations, many of which involved use of government equipment to access pornographic Web sites during the work day.


Here's a great way to ruin the average public school administrator's day: have a team of federal computer forensics experts descend upon a district's IT department to search for electronic evidence.


There is growing awareness that the trend towards inclusion of a "private browsing" in Web browsers may make it more difficult (or at least less fruitful) to conduct computer forensic examinations in the future.

On the TechRepublic website, Tom Olzak, Director of Information Security at HCR Manor Care in Ohio, has a new blog posting entitled "How do new private browsing capabilities affect forensics?" He provides a brief overview of how the new feature will work in the various browsers and then discusses some of the implications for computer forensic examiners and corporate IT departments.


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