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Providing
a Foundation for Analysis of Volatile Data Stores
Timothy Vidas
Naval Postgraduate School
Monterey, CA
tvidas@nps.edu
ABSTRACT
Current threats against typical
computer systems demonstrate a need for forensic analysis of
memory-resident data in addition to the conventional static
analysis common today. Certain attacks and types of malware
exist solely in memory and leave little or no evidentiary
information on nonvolatile stores such as a hard disk drive. The
desire to preserve system state at the time of response may even
warrant memory acquisition independent of perceived threats and
the ability to analyze the acquired duplicate.
Tools capable of duplicating various types of volatile data
stores are becoming widely available. Once the data store has
been duplicated, current forensic procedures have no method for
extrapolating further useful information from the duplicate.
This paper is focused on providing the groundwork for performing
forensic investigations on the data that is typically stored in
a volatile data store, such as system RAM.
It is intended that, when combined with good acquisition
techniques, it will be shown that it is possible to obtain more
post incident response information along with less impact to
potential evidence when compared to typical incident response
procedures.
Keywords: Digital
Forensics, Volatility, RAM, Windows Forensics, Computer Memory,
Acquisition
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