IoT Forensic Science: Principles, Processes, and Activities

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Serval ID
serval:BIB_8702C172EE79
Type
A part of a book
Publication sub-type
Chapter: chapter ou part
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
IoT Forensic Science: Principles, Processes, and Activities
Title of the book
Applied Approach to Privacy and Security for the Internet of Things
Author(s)
Casey Eoghan (co-first), Spichiger Hannes, Ryser Elénore, Servida Francesco, Jaquet-Chiffelle David-Olivier (co-last)
Publisher
IGI Global
Address of publication
Herschey PA, USA 17033
ISBN
978-1-7998-2444-2
ISSN
1948-9730
Publication state
Published
Issued date
01/2020
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Series
Advances in Information Security, Privacy, and Ethics
Chapter
1
Pages
1-37
Edition
1st edition
Language
english
Notes
Parag Chatterjee, Emmanuel Benoist, and Asoke Nath eds.
Abstract
IoT devices produce information that can be used in criminal investigations and cybersecurity incidents to make inferences about identities, locations, chronologies, and relationships between relevant entities. Before this information is relied upon to make critical decisions, its veracity must be assessed critically, and the link between virtual and physical worlds must be evaluated carefully. This chapter presents the forensic science principles needed to exploit the full potential of IoT traces, including uniqueness, exchange, provenance, integrity, reliability, repeatability, evaluating links between virtual and physical entities, and formally assessing alternative hypotheses. This chapter also discusses core forensic processes and activities, demonstrating their application to forensic analysis of IoT devices using practical examples. A typology of IoT traces is proposed and their usefulness during an investigation is discussed. Finally, an investigative scenario is presented to illustrate the opportunities and challenges of exploiting IoT devices and traces for investigative and forensic purposes.
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Create date
24/07/2020 11:34
Last modification date
02/03/2024 7:09
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