CEIC offers lectures and hands-on labs delivered by industry-leading experts, which gives attendees the opportunity to learn the latest techniques and methodologies in computer forensics, eDiscovery, incident response and enterprise investigations.
This year’s keynote address, “Innovation Through Teamwork,” will be delivered by former Astronaut James “Jim” Lovell, commander of the Apollo 13 mission and recipient of the Presidential Medal of Freedom. Lovell will illustrate through his own experiences how agencies and enterprises can work together to resolve challenges faced by many organizations today.
I've done a quick whip up of what I think frubuntu will be like - check it out at www.frubuntu.com. There is currently a release candidate available. What I do need is assistance in mirroring a project like this. Should anyone be able to provide me with resources to host the ISO's please let me know.
Cheers,
Blare
After much soul searching into the balance of usefulness versus sleep deprivation and frying the grey matter, I have decided to pickup maintenance of the FoRK LiveCD.
First off (in the next week or so) will see a maintenance release of the existing publicly available ISO (1.0.2.01), and see it released as FoRK 1.4. This release will be exactly the same as 1.0.2.01, with the exception of an upgraded dcfldd and correspondingly updated FoRK acquisition script to utilise the new features made available by Nick Harbour.
Meanwhile, it looks as though FoRK 2.0 (yes, I've started work on it) will be based upon Ubuntu Feisty.
Unfortunately due to a lack of spare time & resources, FoRK has been discontinued.
We would like to thank your ongoing support (especially the one person who made a donation to our paypal account), and wish you well with your endeavours.
If the project is revitalised at some stage, all active members of the forensicit.com.au website will receive an email notification from the administrators.
Practitioners seeking an alternative to FoRK are recommeded to look at Drew Fahey's Helix, which can be found at the E-Fense website.
On 8 March 2006 the US Court of Appeals ruled that an ex-employee of International Airport Centers must face a suit for using a secure-deletion program to remove files from a laptop computer.
Interestingly, sections of the Victorian Crimes Act mean that we could see the same cases brought to trial in Australia.
