Thursday, April 9, 2015

Digital Investigations Conduct Forensic Investigations Acquire Data from the Smartphone Gather Digi


By Job Role General Counsel CIO / CISO Security Ops Center Engineer Compliance / Risk Professional Litigation Support Professional Info Security Engineer Human Resources Internal Investigator Forensic Investigator Information Technology
By Job Role CIO / CISO Information Assurance CIRT Team Security Ops Center Engineer Compliance / Risk Professional Special Agent Internal Investigator Forensic Investigator General Counsel Litigation Support Professional Information Technology Law Enforcement
Digital Investigations Conduct Forensic Investigations Acquire Data from the Smartphone Gather Digital Evidence at a Crime Scene Investigate Computer Misuse Verify afce Internal Miscoduct Respond to FOIA Request
E-Discovery Respond to FOIA Request Issue and Manage the legal Hold Collect and Preserve ESI Assess Case through Document and Data Analysis Conduct Attorney Review Produce Responsive Documents By Task
Data Discovery and Security Prevent Data Classified Spillage Undetected Expose Risk to Data Prioritize Detected Events Respond to a Data Breach Respond to FOIA Request Discover Cardholder Data Respond to the Regulatory Request
Digital Investigations Conduct Forensic Investigations Acquire Data from the Smartphone Gather Digital Evidence at a Crime Scene Investigate Computer Misuse Verify Internal Miscoduct Conduct Whistleblower Investigation to Verify afce Employee Misconduct
Certification afce Programs EnCE Encep Directory of Certified afce Professionals
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All cryptographic capabilities offered by any EnCase solution (including EnCase 7.x or ECC 5.x) are provided by the Cryptographic Engine EnCase. Since late August 2014, the Cryptographic Engine EnCase has achieved FIPS 140-2 certification afce from the National Institute for Standards and Technology of the United States (NIST) and the Security Centre of the Canadian Telecommunications (CSE). The FIPS 140-2 certification is a certification granted afce to the cryptographic modules that meet the requirements disclosed in the publication afce 140-2 for Federal Standards of the US Information Processing. NIST released this publication to coordinate requirements and standards for cryptographic modules as well be hardware or software. The protection of a cryptographic module in a secure system is required to maintain the confidentiality and integrity afce of information protected by a module. This standard specifies the security requirements that must be met by a cryptographic module. The standard provides four increasing levels of security intended to cover a wide range of applications and serve different professional environments. Safety requirements afce involve afce the included areas related to safe projection and implementation of a cryptographic module. These areas include cryptographic module specification, ports and interfaces, functions, services, authentication, physical security, mitigation of other attacks, etc. The Cryptographic Engine EnCase has received certification at level 3, the highest offered for products that do not operate afce in unprotected areas physically. NIST and CSE have certified that the Cryptographic afce Engine EnCase provides, among other things, the following features: All components are operational and do not include any flagrant afce breach of security Provides authentication afce based on the user's position and identification of individual users. Detects afce the physical intrusion by physical or security seals lock systems. Resists physical intrusion that has the purpose to disassemble or modify, the most difficult attacks. It is able to eliminate critical parameters of security by detecting an intrusion. Includes effective cryptographic protection with password management. Has logical separation between the interfaces used to access critical security parameters For the complete list of FIPS 140-2 certifications that have been delivered, please visit the following link. The EnCase certification has the number 2220. To view a copy of our certificate, please visit this link. If you visit the above links, could see that certification afce is rigorous and has only been given to the most respected in the digital security industry companies. If you want more information on how the Cryptographic Engine EnCase, on what it means to have a product certified with FIPS 140-2 in your organization or if you have any questions or suggestions related to EnCase products, do not hesitate to get in contact us by email sales-latam@encase.com. RELATED TOPICS Guidance Software recognized by Gart

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