NYC4SEC Message Board › Next Hope - Early Regisitration Ends Sunday 7/11
| Douglas Brush | |
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Register Now
July 16-18, 2010 The Hotel Pennsylvania New York City Registration is $85 online now or $100 at the door. The special hackable OpenAMD RFID badges are only guaranteed for online registrants and speakers, as supplies are limited. http://thenexthope.or... I am hoping (seriously no pun there) to maybe pick a session we can all meet at and then grab drinks afterward. How About: Sniper Forensics - Changing the Landscape of Modern Forensics and Incident Response On Sunday? I can try yo lure Chris Pogue to hang with our group after his speech. Chris is a great guy to know and lives and breaths InfoSec. Let me know if Sunday, 7/18 at 6pm will work for everyone. Doug About: Sniper Forensics - Changing the Landscape of Modern Forensics and Incident Response At one time, computer forensics consisted of pulling the plug, imaging everything in sight, and loading those images into a massive forensics program for “analysis.” As computer hackers became more resourceful, the complexity of computer forensics increased exponentially. Add to that the growing size of data storage devices, and it becomes infeasible to even consider imaging tens or hundreds of terabytes, let alone loading those images into some forensic software. So what's the answer? How can incident responders hope to remain relevant in today's operating environment? With Sniper Forensics! In addition to offering tips and tools, this talk will provide real world examples of how the landscape of modern forensics is being changed. Chris Pogue is a senior security analyst for the Spiderlabs incident response and digital forensics team at Trustwave. He has over ten years of administrative and security experience including three years on the IBM ISS X-Force emergency response services team, five years with IBM At one time, computer forensics consisted of pulling the plug, imaging everything in sight, and loading those images into a massive forensics program for “analysis.” As computer hackers became more resourceful, the complexity of computer forensics increased exponentially. Add to that the growing size of data storage devices, and it becomes infeasible to even consider imaging tens or hundreds of terabytes, let alone loading those images into some forensic software. So what's the answer? How can incident responders hope to remain relevant in today's operating environment? With Sniper Forensics! In addition to offering tips and tools, this talk will provide real world examples of how the landscape of modern forensics is being changed. Chris Pogue is a senior security analyst for the Spiderlabs incident response and digital forensics team at Trustwave. He has over ten years of administrative and security experience including three years on the IBM ISS X-Force emergency response services team, five years with IBM |