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8th EAI International Conference on Digital Forensics & Cyber Crime

September 28–30, 2016 | New York City, United States

 

Day 1 - 28th September 2016

08:00 - 08:45

Bus from Holiday Inn Express Manhattan Midtown West to John Jay College (please be on time)

Registration starts

08:45 - 09:00

Welcome to ICDF2C'16

09:00 - 10:00

Keynote - Elizabeth Schweinsberg (Google)

30 min Coffee Break

10:30 - 12:30

Workshop on large amount of data during investigation (NUIX)

1.5 Hours Lunch Break

14:00 - 15:30

Session I: Investigative Techniques

Neil Rowe, Riqui Schwamm, Michael McCarrin and Ralucca Gera (all U.S. Naval Postgraduate School). Making Sense of Email Addresses on Drives

Samer Al-Khateeb (University of Arkansas at Little Rock), Kevin J Conlan (University of New Haven), Nitin Agarwal (University of Arkansas at Little Rock), Ibrahim Baggili (University of New Haven) and Frank Breitinger (University of New Haven). Exploring Deviant Hacker Networks (DHN) On Social Media Platform

Murat Gunestas and Zeki Bilgin (both Turkey Security Department). Log analysis using temporal logic and reconstruction approach: web server case

30 min Coffee Break

16:00 - 17:00

 

 

 

 

 

Session II: Digital Forensics Analyse Techniques

Thibault Julliand, Vincent Nozick and Hugues Talbot (all University Paris-Est). Countering noise-based splicing detection using noise density transfer

Marcus Thompson and Raymond Hansen (both Purdue University). Verification of recovered digital evidence on the amazon kindle

17:30

19:00 - Whenever

Bus back to the Holiday Inn Express Manhattan Midtown West

Join us for a common dinner (on your own)

 

                              

 

Day 2 - 29th September 2016

9:00

 

Bus to John Jay College (please be on time)

Registration starts

09:30 - 10:30

Keynote - Nasir Memon (NYU Poly)

30 min Coffee Break

11:00 - 12:00

Workshop on Full Disk Encryption Password Cracking (Domingo Montanaro)

1.5 Hours Lunch Break

13:30 - 15:00

Session III: Approximate matching

Vikram Harichandran, Frank Breitinger and Ibrahim Baggili (all University of New Haven). Bytewise Approximate Matching: The Good, The Bad, and The Unknown

Doowon Jeong (Korea University), Frank Breitinger (University of New Haven), Hari Kang (Korea University) and Sangjin Lee (Korea University). Towards syntactic approximate matching - a pre-processing experiment

Donghoon Chang, Somitra Sanadhya and Monika Singh (all Indraprastha Institute of Information Technology Delhi). Security Analysis of mvHash-B Similarity Hashing

30 min Coffee Break

15:30 - 16:30

Presentation Session

Jan Pluskal, Ondrej Rysavy and Petr Matousek (all Brno University of Technology). On the identification of applications from captured network traffic

Richard Wilson (University of Maryland, Baltimore County). Social Media, ISIS and Cyber Terrorism: An Anticipatory Ethical Analysis

Richard Wilson (University of Maryland, Baltimore County). Information Warfare, Business and Infrastructure Defense: An Anticipatory Ethical Analysis

Short break

17:00

19:00

Reception at John Jay College (including Poster Session / Demonstrations)

Bus back to the hotel

 

 

 

 

Day 3 - 30th September 2016

08:30 - 09:00

 

Bus to John Jay College (please be on time)

Registration starts

09:00 - 10:30

Session IV: System Design

Radek Hranicky, Martin Holkovic, Petr Matousek and Ondrej Rysavy (all Brno University of Technology). On Efficiency of Distributed Password Recovery

Hussam Mohammed, Nathan Clarke and Fudong Li (all School of Computing Plymouth). An automated approach for digital forensic analysis of heterogeneous big data

Kibin Lee (Korea University), Joshua I. James (Hallym University), Tekachew Gobena Ejeta (Korea University) and Hyoungjoong Kim (Korea University). Electronic Voting Service Using Block-chain

30 min Coffee Break

11:00 - 12:00

Workshop on Drone Forensics (Devon Clark)

12:00 - 12:15

12:30

Closing words

Bus to the hotel