Just like any career field, you're likely to develop a specialty in forensics. It's a good idea to include any technical reference that directly deals with the operating systems and programs that you are (or planning on) investigating. Example: the "Bat book" is a good reference when tracing e-mail back through Sendmail- based servers. (The message ID contains valuable information.) - Tim On Tue, 2002-04-30 at 00:41, T. Kenji Sugahara wrote: > Does anyone have any suggestions for reading up on computer crime & > forensics? > > I've been pondering; > Handbook of Computer Crime Investigation: Forensic Tools & Technology. > Eoghan Casey ed. > Cyber Forensics: A Field Manual for Collecting, Examing, and Preserving > Evidence of Computer Crimes. Marcella & Green eds. > Computer Forensics: Incident Response Essentials. Kruse & Heiser > Digital Evidence and Computer Crime. Casey. > Computer Forensics: Computer Crime Scene Investigation. Vacca. > Cybercrime: Investigation, Prosecution and Defense of a > Computer-Related Crime. Clifford ed. > > T. Kenji Sugahara > Chief Operating Officer > counterclaim > Phone: 541-484-9235 > Fax: 541-484-9193
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