Log Management for e-Discovery, Forensics, Change Management and More!
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As a security professional responding to a stolen laptop data or other data loss event it is incredibly difficult to balance every facet of an incident and assign resources correctly. In a serious incident we are asked to immediately initiate and oversee what is effectively a very complex project with a scope that typically includes incident investigation, asset recovery, law enforcement liaison, employee or public communications, technical responses and even media relations. This session will outline an approach to balancing these competing areas of focus in a typical incident by analysing system logs and other common audit trails to add context around a data loss. Typical data loss scenarios will be explored and mapped to potential information sources with examples of how log data can advance the investigation and help to manage the perception of a breach.

In this session you will learn what options are available from the ERP vendors, and how you can create a secure audit log of the financial transactions in your General Ledger, Accounts Payable, Accounts Receivable, and other financial systems. The session will review different analysis techniques and look at the benefits beyond compliance, revealing how to generate a hard dollar ROI and enhance your working capital – key requirements in today’s economy.

Driven by compliance, security and operational concerns , IT departments and security teams are using log management and intelligence (LMI) as a best practice and integral part of their IT and security strategy. At the same time, the log management Log Management can be used for more than just classic log use cases: troubleshooting, security monitoring and regulatory compliance. During this session we will cover how log management solutions can be used to address e-discovery concerns , incident investigations, forensics and more. Specifically, the presentation will cover: Using log management tools for forensics and e-discovery; addressing legal requirements Log management tools as a lightweight way to track data leakage and loss Database monitoing using a log management tool, collecting database audit logs

The availability and integrity of log file data is key to Digital Forensic preservations, analysis and evidence admittance. This presentation will illustrate how Log Files are managed in typical Digital Forensic investigations. Additionally we will explore some case examples where the availability or integrity of Log Files has helped or hurt a Digital Forensic investigation.



