Finding the smoking gun in a mountain of digital evidence

Traditional forensic approaches won't cut it.

Preventing white collar crime has become a priority for the corporate community as new opportunities have arisen for fraud, information leaks and identity theft. Criminals can hide evidence of their misdeeds within massive volumes of data stored in digital devices. This makes traditional methods of electronic investigation ineffective and unsustainable. Pricewaterhouse Coopers' 6th Global Economic Crime Survey found 47 per cent of Australian organisations participating in the report admitted to experiencing at least one instance of economic crime in the last 12 months, up 7 per cent ...
You must be a registered member to access this content.
Please Sign in below or Register now.
NOTE: This Feature is more than 7 days old.
Please login to view the rest of this article

Registered users may log in here.

Login or Register now and get unlimited access.


Why sign up?
  • Unlimited access to SC Magazine content as well as access to to our global resources from SC Magazine US and UK editions.
  • Full use of over 11,000 articles database covering breaking news, video interviews, case studies, research, product reviews and exclusive features with fast and intuitive filtering of results.
  • Personalised "Recommended for you" filters to ensure you have the most relevant content at your finger tips.
  • Daily security bulletin direct to your inbox covering the latest security news from Australia/NZ and around the world.

Register now, its free! We'll never sell your details to third parties and it helps SC Magazine to keep serving you quality stories.
Sign up to receive SC Magazine email newsletters
   FOLLOW US...
Most Read