Certificate in Digital Forensics Fundamentals
Provided by QA
Overview
The Certificate in Digital Forensics Fundamentals course (QAIDIGFOR) is designed to help commercial and government organisations collect, preserve and report on digital artefacts in a way which is suitable for use in investigations.
The course covers the broad topics essential to the digital forensics; disciplines. It sets out a framework for investigations, covering the best practice as described by The National Police Chiefs' Council (NPCC) formally ACPO guidelines. Forensic fundamentals will be covered as well as the use of open source forensic tools. The data will be then analysed, and an example report produced.
Participants to this course learn about the methods to identify, preserve, analysis and report on digital artefacts. Using a mixed approach of fundamentals and open source software, delegates will be able to select suitable tools and report on their findings in an evidential way.
The Certificate in Digital Forensic Fundamentals course audience includes all teams across the IT, Security, Internal Audit, Law Enforcement and Government.
Course Author
Mark Martin
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Learning Outcomes
Course Outline
Module 1: Intro to Digital forensic
Duration - 90 minutes. Questions - 70 Multiple choice (4 multiple choice answers only 1 of which is correct). Pass Mark - 50%
The exam is a Proctor-U APMG exam for the Certificate in Digital Forensics Fundamentals, which will be taken by delegates in their own time after the course.
Delegates will receive individual emails to access their AMPG candidate portal, typically available two weeks post exam.
If you experience any issues, please contact the APMG technical help desk on 01494 4520450.
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The Certificate in Digital Forensics Fundamentals course (QAIDIGFOR) is designed to help commercial and government organisations collect, preserve and report on digital artefacts in a way which is suitable for use in investigations.
The course covers the broad topics essential to the digital forensics; disciplines. It sets out a framework for investigations, covering the best practice as described by The National Police Chiefs' Council (NPCC) formally ACPO guidelines. Forensic fundamentals will be covered as well as the use of open source forensic tools. The data will be then analysed, and an example report produced.
Participants to this course learn about the methods to identify, preserve, analysis and report on digital artefacts. Using a mixed approach of fundamentals and open source software, delegates will be able to select suitable tools and report on their findings in an evidential way.
The Certificate in Digital Forensic Fundamentals course audience includes all teams across the IT, Security, Internal Audit, Law Enforcement and Government.
Course Author
Mark Martin
+
Learning Outcomes
- Understand the purpose, benefits, and key terms of digital forensics
- Describe and adhere to the principles of the forensic framework
- Understand the importance of the chain of custody
- Demonstrate a basic knowledge of key locations in different operating systems
- Identify how different file systems represent files and how they deal with deletion etc.
- Understand where timestamps and other meta data comes from
- Have knowledge of the legal framework in which they operate, and the expected level of ethical behaviour expected
Course Outline
Module 1: Intro to Digital forensic
- What digital forensics is
- What is digital evidence?
- When and why is digital forensics used?
- Different Types of Digital Forensics - Standalone and e-discovery
- What skills should a computer forensic expert have?
- Introduction to the forensic framework
- What legislation applies to investigations?
- ISO/IEC standards what does it cover?
- What does the legislation cover?
- What do authorising officers have to consider
- What does the legislation mean for investigators?
- The consequence of failing to adhere to the legislation which applies
- Computer Misuse Act and how it applies
- The NPCC guidelines and how they apply to the collection of digital evidence
- The role of a First Responder
- Triaging - the new digital forensics approach
- What is ;chain of custody; concept and how critical it is to maintain
- Triaging - Digital Forensics
- What is the order of volatility
- What imaging is and why we work on imaged data
- Write blocking hardware and software
- How do we forensically image a live device?
- How do we forensically image a switched off device?
- Physical and Logical Imaging
- Understand Hashing Algorithms and collisions and how it is used to verify acquisitions
- Creating Forensic Image using FTK Imager
- Why do we need to know about hardware?
- Live RAM capture and analysis (pagefile.sys and hiberfil.sys)
- Data storage - magnetic hard disks
- Understand how solid state drives and flash memory differ
- What is the BIOS and UEFI and what settings they hold
- Analysing the boot process
- Partitioning Disk analysis
- Volume and Master Boot Record
- How number systems work and how data is represented in binary and hexadecimal
- Difference between Big and Little Endian
- Character Encoding ASCII and Unicode
- Different File systems NTFS, FAT
- Analysis what happens when file is saved, deleted
- What is Slack Space and the different types of slack
- Access control lists and permissions
- What is the Master File Table used for?
- Recovering Data from Recycle bin
- Viewing Deleted data
- Analysis of Prefetch folder
- Differences between user profiles
- File Signatures Analysis
- Manual File carving
- File Carving Using Kali Linux
- What is Metadata?
- Understand about MAC times
- How to find meta-data inside documents
- How to use Fingerprinting Organizations with Collected Archives how to extract Meta-data
- EXIF Data and analysis
- Windows User Profile
- Identifying different Windows Artefacts and what information can be found
- Analysing Thumbnail Cache
- Viewing the Windows Registry and locating information
- Analysing Email Headers
- Forensic Analysis of HTTP data using Wireshark
- Analysing of web browser artefacts
- Understanding the different type of logs and what information they can provide as part of forensic analysis
- Analysing thumbnail cache databases
- How to analyse the windows registry and find evidence
- How to analyse email headers
- Mobile Forensics Require a Different Approach
- What information a mobile device can provide
- Different methods for conducting mobile device examinations
- Mobile phone evidential values
- The difference between notes, examination logs and witness statements
- The issue with printing evidence and court requirements
- Commercial Forensic
- Open Source Forensic Tools
Duration - 90 minutes. Questions - 70 Multiple choice (4 multiple choice answers only 1 of which is correct). Pass Mark - 50%
The exam is a Proctor-U APMG exam for the Certificate in Digital Forensics Fundamentals, which will be taken by delegates in their own time after the course.
Delegates will receive individual emails to access their AMPG candidate portal, typically available two weeks post exam.
If you experience any issues, please contact the APMG technical help desk on 01494 4520450.
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Enquire
Start date | Location / delivery | |
---|---|---|
27 Jan 2025 | QA On-Line Virtual Centre, Virtual | Book now |
01132207150
01132207150