Showing posts with label Cyber Investigations. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cyber Investigations. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 23, 2017

RMRI, LLC. AND SLACK SPACE DATA: A New Era In Cyber-Investigations




Today I was joined by Donald Warren for a consultation on an Internet Investigation. Donald came in and consulted to me on a case that I am working. After some conversation, Donald and I decided that I'd subcontract technical projects to him.

Donald Warren is a consummate professional, who has just started his own business. Donald is multi-talented, and one of the hardest workers that I have ever known.

Donald will be working various technical projects with me. He is also building and coding some really nice machines for furthering cyber-investigation work.

With a licensed investigator and a very knowledgeable technical consultant working together, you get the best of both worlds working for you at RMRI, LLC. Now you have and unbeatable team, a strong investigator that can get you all of the information you need on any subject that you are having to identify on the Internet, and a strong tech person that can navigate the highly technical framework encountered in cyber-investigations.

Digital Forensics, Email Tracing, Internet Profiling, Penetration Testing are just some of the services that we can offer you.

NOW YOU HAVE AN UNBEATABLE TEAM WORKING FOR YOU!


RMRI, LLC.:
PHONE: (573) 234-4871

Slackspace Data
PHONE: (573) 355-5044



Sunday, June 15, 2008

Computer Forensics Examiners: To License or NOT.........

I have been reading a great deal of articles concerning the trend that some states are taking to require Computer Forensics Examiners to be licensed as a Private Investigator before they can commercially offer this service. I have to admit that I have mixed feelings about this.

First, let me say that I am a licensed Private Investigator, so one might assume that I would be all in favor of this type of requirement. Of course this would be an ASSumption, and it would be incorrect.

While on one hand I will say that computer forensics is a type of investigation since it's results are going to be used in court by it's very definition, there may be an argument as to why a person would need a Private Investigator's license to perform this service.

On the other hand, are these same states that are requiring that a Computer Forensic Examiner have a P.I. License going to require EVERY expert witness that has to go over specific case details, run tests on evidence, interpret these test results, and report on them to have a P.I. License? In the truest sense of what an Expert Witness is supposed to do, he or she is performing a type of investigation also. Will tire tread experts now have to have a P.I. License?

There is a larger consideration to make here also. A P.I. License does NOT make a person a competent Computer Forensics Expert. There are Private Investigators right now that have less than 5 years of Computer Forensics Examination experience that are going into court and testifying on their examination results that would not know the difference between a yellow and a black hardware write-blocker from Tableau. Think about the implications here. By requiring Computer Forensic Examiners to have a P.I. License, there would seem to be a limiting effect on the quality of Computer Forensics Examiners made available to the defendant's attorney. What about the people that have been in the business of conducting Computer Forensic Examination for 10 and 15 years, like Dan Farmer and Andrew Rosen? I could not imagine being charged with a serious computer crime, and wanting to be able to hire the very best Computer Forensics Examiner I could find like Andrew Rosen, and instead having to settle for a Private Investigator that only 5 years ago could not even figure out how to turn his computer on. I don't want to hire a Computer Forensic Examiner that BOUGHT a certification, I want to hire the Examiner that wrote the program that these certifications are being brought from. I don't want to have to sit through some P.I.'s "guesswork" as to what might have occurred on my computer, I want to be communicating with someone that can tell me what happened on my computer and that he can actually prove it. Maybe it is just me, but I feel that this new legislation that some states are passing that require Computer Forensics Examiners to have a P.I. License is not very well thought out.

If these states that are now requiring Computer Forensics Examiners to have a P.I. License would have given it a little more thought, they may have found that requiring a separate state certification to offer Computer Forensics Examinations might have been the wiser way to go.



Ricky B. Gurley Best Cyber Investigator