Instructors: Profs. J Genetti and K Nance
Office Hours: 208B Chapman MWF 2:30-3:30, T 2:00-3:30, or by appointment
Phone/Email: 474-5737 / ffjdg @ uaf . edu
Class web page:
http://www.cs.uaf.edu/~cs393
Prerequisite: CS201 or ES201 or permission of instructor
Department policies:
www.cs.uaf.edu/dms/Policies.html
Textbooks:
Digital Evidence and Computer Crime by Eoghan Casey
Incident Response: Investigating Computer Crime by Chris Prosise & Kevin Mandia
Overview:
Computer Forensics is a newly emerging area that uses procedure-centric
approaches to cyber-attack prevention, detection, and incident response.
Since no system can be 100% secure, we will study procedures to detect
and gather court-admissible evidence using various forensic techniques.
Topics:
Grading Policy:
Final grades will be assigned based on the following percentage intervals:
A - [89.5%, 100%]
B - [79.5%, 89.5%)
C - [69.5%, 79.5%)
D - [59.5%, 69.5%)
F - [0.0%, 59.5%)
The assignments/exams will be weighted as follows:
Homework: 40%
Project/Presentation: 20%
Midterm: 20%
Final Exam: 20%
Homework:
Homework will be regularly assigned and is due by 5PM on the due date. Late
assignments will not be accepted. Students may discuss possible approaches
to problems, specific syntax questions and aspects of debugging. However, all
programs and written assignments are to be done strictly on an individual
basis, unless otherwise specified.
Project/Presentation:
Groups of students will solve a unique forensic investigation and present the results
to the class. Presentations will be graded on correctness, depth of analysis
and clarity of presentation.
Exams:
Exams may consist of any mix of multiple choice, short answer, program fragments
and short essay questions.
Your goal should be to demonstrate knowledge and understanding of course concepts.