I received some questions from readers and I thought
that I'd take a crack at them...
With consumer and commerical hard drives getting larger
and larger (soon there will be a consumer-level 1TB HD)
what effect will the sheer volume of information have
on the forensics community in general, and the
open-source forensics community in specific? Does the
future include more automated tools? Distributed forensic
examinations? Will the open-source forensic
community be able to keep up with the commercial tools?
For the most part, this appears to be two separate
questions, but I'll treat them as pretty much the same
one.
This is nothing new...the challenge of increasing volumes
has affected the forenic community since...well...since
there was storage. Capacities have always increased...such
is the nature of a consumer market. So what's the answer?
Well, in a nutshell...the Age of Nintendo Forensics is
dead. What I mean by that is that new techniques,
processes and methodologies need to be employed to
meet these challenges. We can no longer rely on
simply pushing a button...we have to understand
what it is we're looking for, and where to
look for it.
Notice I didn't say "developed". Rather, I said "employed".
Yes, it was my intention to imply that these techniques are
already available, and actually used by a number of
practioners. However, the vast majority of the digital
forensics community appears to rely on the traditional
approach to computer forensics analysis, which can be
likened to killing the victim of a crime and performing
an autopsy to see what happened.
Live analysis techniques need to be employed more often.
Many traditionalists say that "I won't use these
techniques until they've been proved in court."
Well, consider this...at one point, computer forensics
wasn't used in court, and had to be proven.
Suffice to say, computing technology grows in complexity
...this applies to the hardware, as well as the software.
Accordingly, forensic techniques need to keep pace.
The traditional techniques are still usable...I'm not
saying that they aren't...but practitioners can no longer
learn one thing and hope to stay in business as complexity
and change surrounds them. We need to grow in knowledge
and understanding in order to keep up. This includes
Locard's Exchange Principle, as well as understanding
what actions or conditions lead to the creation and
modification of certain artifacts...from that, we
understand that the absence of an artifact is in
itself an artifact.
Some of the challenges introduced by Windows Vista
include extracting live memory and (presumably) an
increase in use of EFS by consumers. How can these
challeges best be addressed by the forensics community?
The challenge of extracting live memory has been an
issue since Windows 2003 SP1, when user-mode access
to the \\.\PhysicalMemory object was restricted.
However, has it really been a challenge, per se?
How many folks have obtained memory dumps, and of
those, how have they been used? It isn't as if
the vast majority of the community has been using
physical memory as a source of evidence and
presented that in court.
That being said, these challenges will be addressed
by a small portion of the forensics community.
That core group (and it may be dispersed) have
developed processes and methodologies, as well as
documentation, that they will use, and even
publish. However, it may be a while before the
rest of the "community" of forensic practitioners
catches on and begins using these on a regular
basis.
Since Vista was specifically asked about, I'll
throw this out there...there is a Registry value
called NtfsDisableLastAccessUpdate, and yes, it
does just exactly what as it sounds. If this
value is set to "1", then the operating system
will not update last access times on files.
From NT through 2003, this has been a setting
that was disabled by default, and recommended
to be set for high-volume file servers in order
to increase performance. However, on Vista,
this functionality is enabled by default. What
this means is that examiners are going to have
to use other techniques for determining timelines
of activity, etc., and that may even require
Registry analysis.
Do you think there are ethical challenges
specific to forensic examiners or
incident handlers? What do you think is
the most effective method of oversight in
small offices where there may only be one
examiner? Would you say that strong personal
ethics are more important than technical
skill for an examiner/incident handler?
I would suggest that ethics is not something
that is restricted to forensic examiners alone,
but just as important in all fields. I think
that in any field, a wake-up call comes when
someone falls into that "who are you to
question me" trap and then gets caught.
I also think that is an important evolution
and good for the community at large.
In this kind of work it is important to
remain humble and to constantly keep checking
ourselves. There's nothing wrong with going to
someone else and asking, hey, did I do enough
here, or is this telling me what I think it's
telling me? Overall, I think that builds trust,
and strengthens the individuals.
Thoughts? Comments? Email me, or leave a comment...
The Windows Incident Response Blog is dedicated to the myriad information surrounding and inherent to the topics of IR and digital analysis of Windows systems. This blog provides information in support of my books; "Windows Forensic Analysis" (1st thru 4th editions), "Windows Registry Forensics", as well as the book I co-authored with Cory Altheide, "Digital Forensics with Open Source Tools".
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Nintendo Forensics? What a bunch of hacks use THAT software. I'm an XBox guy myself. It does a much better job of recovering deleted files and uncovering the HPA and DCO.
ReplyDeleteSeriously, if you rely on only on software to do your forensic work, can you honestly take the stand and swear it found everything and WHY you know that?
Live forensics is on the way!
Follow-up -
ReplyDeleteDo you see the forensics world "professionalizing" in the future, the same way that many other computer-related fields have? What I mean is, small-shop forensics, LEO's who are "hobbyists" dying off and the work taken by specialists who *only* do forensics?
For what it's worth;
ReplyDeleteI'm not a fan of small shop forensics. If I was on trial I wouldn't want a forensic expert of any kind who does it "part time". I can't equate the word expert with someone who does computer services and the occasional forensic job. So yes, I think it should move that way, but with a self regulating organization, not governmnet regulated.
But right now I think competition is in the way of CF folks making taht happen.
If I was on trial I wouldn't want a forensic expert of any kind who does it "part time".
ReplyDeleteNor would I, but I think that with the right information in the hands of your attorney, it wouldn't be a problem to reveal this "expert".
I love your book, man! I have a case that involves the ntfsDisableLastAccessUpdate in XP-Home, NTFS. I've done a few tests that have taught me a few of things. First, it seems that a reboot is necessary to effect the change sought by modifying the value’s data from 0x00 to 0x01, or vice versa. Perhaps that's understandable, given the OS having to deal with date stamps stored in memory that will be written given the passage of time. I’ve also seen one XP-Pro SP2 NTFS machine on which the value was not present, although it could be created (I thought that is was on all systems by default).
ReplyDeleteEven if the data field is set to 0x01, I've found that the last accessed date was updated when I opened, edited, and saved a file in Word. While that may seem normal, as a "new" file should be stamped as newly accessed, editing other file types with other applications does not trip the accessed date if the data equal 0x01. The accessed date also is not tripped if a file is moved. The key's last modified date is updated when changing the data in this value. There are 2-3 other values in the key, and a change in their data would also trip the key date.
maybe this is something that should be S.O.P. on every exam. I have a machine that was seized on 5/1/07, the plug having been pulled. At first glance, the file system showed typical last accessed dates, going up through that date. But, I had some seemingly skewed dates: modified after created and accessed. However, the ntfsDisableLastAccessUpdate last mod date was 8/4/05. If the value data had been set/reset any number of times, it still was 0x01 as of today, and any change would have updated the key last mod. Last accessed dates after 8/4/05 could very well be when the file was first created on the volume, as the last accessed dates might not have been updated thereafter, absent the exceptions. (Sometimes the MFT Name Attribute creation date can reveal that, too.)
I love your book, man!
ReplyDeleteThanks! And thanks for the great post!
Harlan