InfraGard eyes cyber crime and the forensic debate

Eoghan Casey
The lawyer, who declined to be quoted by name, asked McGowan how the results of a forensic investigation could be introduced as evidence in court.
McGowan, and his associate, Eoghan Casey (director of training at Stroz), suggested that the main purpose of forensic investigations was to point out the probable cause of a data breach, not to serve as unimpeachable evidence in court. Thus the strength of forensics to reconstruct an event is offset by its seeming lack of exactness. A forensic investigation might point to the probable chain of events behind a data breach, without naming an exactculprit or a specific volume of information altered or stolen.
"Well," the lawyer asked, "at what point could I use forensics to take legal action?"
Casey suggested four levels of conclusions, based on a forensic investigation: very unlikely, somewhat likely, probable, and very probable. In a cyber data breach investigation, if a particular corporate employee is found to be "very probably" the cause of the breach, he or she would face dismissal.
"But that is not going to court," the lawyer observed.
"Forensics isn’t evidentiary," replied Casey. "It is about probable cause."
Casey pointed out that computer forensics is most helpful in reconstructing a cyber crime (forensics experts in this field can often spot a digital "trail" left by hackers), to determine whether the scale of a data breach mandates informing government authorities or the general public.
It can also help programmers develop firewalls and other protections to prevent future breaches.
"It is a game of digital cat and mouse," said Casey. "The growth of malware is amazing; customized attacks take advantage of customized defenses."
And no court, he might have added, has successfully stopped that.
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