A judge has chastised prosecutors for failing to turn over information to the defense in a criminal corruption case against Delaware’s state auditor, issuing a ruling that also exposed weaknesses in the state’s cyber forensics capabilities.
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The data will be used to improve the accuracy of the algorithm's ability to identify a person from low-quality images, like those captured from security cameras or drones.
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The difficulties of gaining access to digital evidence mean that law enforcement agencies must equip themselves with sophisticated technology for collecting and analyzing digital data.
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Countering transnational organized crime efforts are carried out in three main ways: interdiction, intelligence, and investigation.
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NIST's report documents the scientific foundations of digital evidence examination and recommends ways to advance the field.
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Although not inherently illegal, an unintended consequence of this model is that it affords sex predators, rapists, sex traffickers, and other criminal elements the technological means to profit from their crimes while remaining less visible to law enforcement.
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Sometimes it may be necessary to engage in digital field forensics—that is, the collection and, if possible, viewing of digital evidence at the scene in order to make quick decisions about a person at risk, or about preventing future crimes.
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The survey revealed that more than half of the respondents are expecting to make major investments in digital forensics and incident response (DFIR) technology over the next two years to address growing cybersecurity threats.
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A recent investigation revealed a backlog of more than 20,000 digital devices waiting to be examined by forces across England and Wales. Nottinghamshire Police, however, have just 31 phones, tablets and computers waiting to be examined.
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The targeted forensics tool under development will not be used in any way for tracking people. Rather, it will be a tool for collecting evidence to be used in court obtained from phones voluntarily provided to law enforcement by witnesses.
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By cutting off the device from its access “lifeline,” frontline officers and investigators can prevent existing digital evidence from changing, or even disappearing altogether.
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Scientists at the FAPAB Research Center in Italy have unveiled the forensic facial reconstruction of a young woman who lived in Thebes, Egypt in the early 26th dynasty.
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Law enforcement agencies and digital forensics labs aren’t immune to the disruptive and dangerous effects of malware either.
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Law enforcement officials have released new digital reconstruction images of an unidentified female whose skeletal remains were discovered in unincorporated Huerfano County, Colorado, on Aug. 10, 1999.
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A Swansea law expert has been awarded €1.5 million to examine how public perceptions of deepfakes affect trust in user-generated evidence of human rights violations.
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