WSDF 2024Posted in

17th International Workshop on Digital Forensics

Event Dates

Jul 30, 2024 - Aug 02, 2024

Location

Vienna, Austria

Submission Deadline

Apr 29, 2024

Workshop Description:

Digital forensics is a rapidly evolving field primarily focused on the extraction, preservation and analysis of digital evidence obtained from electronic devices in a manner suitable for the presentation of that evidence in a court of law, or its use in other legal proceedings or formal investigation. Research into new methodologies tools and techniques within this domain is necessitated by an ever-increasing dependency on tightly interconnected, complex and pervasive computer systems and networks. The ubiquitous nature of digital devices in modern life presents many avenues for the potential misuse of these devices in crimes that directly involve, or are facilitated by, these technologies. The aim of digital forensics is to produce outputs that can aid in the reconstruction of a sequence of events under investigation, including any events that have occurred within or involving the digital device being examined and entities that have interacted with that device. Due care has to be taken in the identification, collection, archiving, maintenance, handling and analysis of digital evidence in order to prevent damage to data integrity. Such issues combined with the constant evolution of technology provide a large scope of digital forensic research.

WSDF aims to bring together experts from academia, industry, government and law enforcement who are interested in advancing the state of the art in digital forensics by exchanging their knowledge, results, ideas, challenges, best practices and experiences. The aim of the workshop is to provide a relaxed atmosphere that promotes discussion and free exchange of ideas while providing a sound academic backing. Its focus is not only restricted to technical digital forensics but WSDF also welcomes investigative related topics in policing, criminology, law and behavioural sciences.

Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:

Digital Evidence Extraction and Analysis

Network Forensics

Anti-Forensics Techniques

Memory Forensics

Digital Forensics of immersive technologies (AR/MR/VR/XR)

Cyber Terrorism and Warfare

Log Analysis and Malware Analysis

Incident Response and Management

Best Practices and Case Studies

AI to enhance investigation capabilities (e.g., Natural Language Generation (NLG), Large Language Models (LLMs))

AI applications/benefits for policing

Digital Forensics of AI-based systems

Quality assurance in investigations

Certification of Digital Forensics labs Novel Data Recovery and Analysis Techniques

Cyber Criminal Profiling

Big Data in Digital Forensics

Digital Forensics datasets

Digital Forensics education

Cloud Forensics

Mobile & Drone Forensics

Emerging challenges in Digital Forensics

eDiscovery

Open Source Intelligence (OSINT)

Cybercrime investigations

AI-generated synthetic evidence (trends, use, impact)

Evidence gathering in adversarial attacks

AI-generated child abuse material

Investigations involving Deepfakes

Legal and court challenges of Deepfakes

Pattern-of-life Analysis in the era of AI

Workshop Chairs

▪ Virginia N. L. Franqueira

University of Kent, UK

▪ Andrew Marrington

Zayed University, UAE

▪ Richard Overill

King’s College London, UK

▪ Kim-Kwang Raymond Choo

University of Texas at San Antonio, US

Submission Guidelines

The submission guidelines can be found at https://www.ares-conference.eu/conference/submission/ (6-8 pages, a maximum of 10 pages is tolerated). Double blind review: All papers submitted to EasyChair should be anonymized (no names or affiliations of authors should be visible in the paper) with no obvious self-references. Submission of a paper implies that should the paper be accepted, at least one of the authors will register and present the paper in the workshop. Proceedings will be published by ACM.