Computer forensics – yesterday, today and tomorrow
Few things have changed as rapidly during my lifetime as
the field that we call computer forensics. More recent terms like
digital forensics and e-discovery are often used interchangeably
with the term computer forensics.
When I think about the ‘yesterday’ of computer forensics,
I can’t help but remember my first computer. It was a Radio
Shack TRS-80 Model III and it was already three years old when the
FBI started what I consider the father of all computer forensics
teams. I don’t remember even hearing the term computer forensics
until the FBI started its Computer Analysis and Response Team (CART)
in 1984.
Something else made its debut in 1984. 2600 magazine published
its first issue (three full pages front and back on 8.5 x 11 inch
paper) in January 1984. A quick look through the entire first year
of 2600 did not reveal the words “computer forensics”
anywhere that I could find. I’m not sure when 2600
became an actual magazine, but the first three years that I have
in my personal library are all printed on 8.5 x 11 inch paper. An
article in one of the 1986 issues was describing the possibility
of computer crime becoming a federal offence, but there were no
real thoughts about computer forensics then.
Things would begin to change in 1986 with the passing of the Computer
Fraud and Abuse Act. The Computer Security Act of 1987 quickly followed.
Just for fun, I performed a word search for the word ‘forensics’
in both of these important documents of 20+ years ago. You guessed
it – word not found!
I want to share my first experience of examining the contents of
mass storage media even before this kind of an examination was called
computer forensics. Way back in 1988, I was involved with a corporation
that had experienced a hacker break-in. The person who allegedly
committed the crime did it with a Commodore 64 personal computer,
which had a 300-baud modem and one 5.25 inch, 360 kilobyte floppy
disk drive as its mass storage device. In a box near the computer
were about 100 of these 360k floppy disks full of all kinds of proprietary
information.
The main reason that I like to keep an eye on the ‘yesterday’
of computer security issues, including computer forensics, is that
it lets me know just how fast things are changing in terms of mass
storage devices, as well as computer speed and memory capabilities.
Each increase in these numbers presents more possible computer crime
targets, and much faster processing speed and storage for those
committing the crimes.
The rapidly growing crime of online child pornography is a perfect
example. I can’t recall ever seeing a decent picture on a
360k floppy, and the two megapixel digital pictures that many digital
cameras produce today would take quite a while to send to anyone
with a 300 baud modem.
Looking at the storage and possible forensics needs of yesterday,
those 100 floppy disks in the above-mentioned crime of 1988 would
have added up to 36 megabytes of data before formatting. My small
two gigabyte thumb drive (four gig thumb drives are now becoming
common and cheap) would require over 5 500 of those 360k floppies
to contain the same amount of data. Make that a two terabyte disk
drive, and you would need 5 500 000 000 of those 360k floppies.
Let’s not even go there yet with the thought of petabyte drives
– but they are coming!
I’ve spent most of my time in this article helping us to
remember the not-too-distant ‘yesterday’ of computers
and computer forensics. That Commodore 64 was in production from
1982 until 1994 – that’s 12 years. Technology is moving
way too fast for that to ever happen again. If something is state
of the art for 12 months, it’s incredible.
I’d really like to tell you a whole lot more about computer
forensics today and tomorrow, but I have run out of time and space.
Here’s want I can do. I can let you know about a brand new
book titled Techno Security’s Guide to E-Discovery and
Digital Forensics, recently published by Elsevier’s Syngress
Publishing which will address many of these issues in great detail.
Jack Wiles is lead author of Techno Security’s Guide
to E-Discovery and Digital Forensics, published
by Syngress and available
fom Amazon and other book retailers. He is also president of
TheTrainingCo.
 
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