Cyber forensics needs analysis survey in Computers & Security

2015-11-19

The results of our needs analysis survey are finally available. The final version will be available soon here. A preliminary version is freely available here until January 12th.

Vikram S. Harichandran, Frank Breitinger, Ibrahim Baggili, Andrew Marrington: A cyber forensics needs analysis survey: Revisiting the domain's needs a decade later. In: Computers & Security, vol. 57, pp. 1–13, 2015, ISSN: 0167-4048.

 

Abstract

Abstract The number of successful cyber attacks continues to increase, threatening financial and personal security worldwide. Cyber/digital forensics is undergoing a paradigm shift in which evidence is frequently massive in size, demands live acquisition, and may be insufficient to convict a criminal residing in another legal jurisdiction. This paper presents the findings of the first broad needs analysis survey in cyber forensics in nearly a decade, aimed at obtaining an updated consensus of professional attitudes in order to optimize resource allocation and to prioritize problems and possible solutions more efficiently. Results from the 99 respondents gave compelling testimony that the following will be necessary in the future: (1) better education/training/certification (opportunities, standardization, and skill-sets); (2) support for cloud and mobile forensics; (3) backing for and improvement of open-source tools (4) research on encryption, malware, and trail obfuscation; (5) revised laws (specific, up-to-date, and which protect user privacy); (6) better communication, especially between/with law enforcement (including establishing new frameworks to mitigate problematic communication); (7) more personnel and funding.