[Sigdl-l] FW: [Pasig-announce] December 12 PASIG Webinar: Digital Forensics andBitCurator
Richard Hill
rhill at asis.org
Mon Dec 2 10:17:58 EST 2013
ASIS members attend at no cost.
__________
Richard Hill
ASIS&T Executive Director
1320 Fenwick Lane, Suite 510
Silver Spring, MD 20910
FAX: (301) 495-0810
Voice: (301) 495-0900
rhill at asis.org
_____
From: Pasig-announce [mailto:pasig-announce-bounces at asis.org] On Behalf Of
Arthur Pasquinelli
Sent: Wednesday, November 27, 2013 5:17 PM
To: pasig-announce at mail.asis.org
Subject: [Pasig-announce] December 12 PASIG Webinar: Digital Forensics
andBitCurator
The next PASIG webinar will be given by Cal Lee, a regular PASIG and IS&T
Archiving speaker and leader in the area of Digital Forensics.
PASIG Webinar: Digital Forensics and BitCurator
Webinar Date: Tuesday, December 12, 2013, 11:30am-12:30pm (EST)
To register go to:
http://www.asis.org/Conferences/webinars/Webinar-PASIG-12-12-2013-register.h
tml
Abstract:
The BitCurator Project, a collaborative effort led by the School of
Information and Library Science at the University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill and Maryland Institute for Technology in the Humanities at
the University of Maryland, builds on previous work by addressing two
fundamental needs and opportunities for collecting institutions: (1)
integrating digital forensics tools and methods into the workflows and
collection management environments of libraries, archives and museums
and (2) supporting properly mediated public access to forensically
acquired data.
The project is developing and disseminating a suite of open source
tools. These tools are currently being developed and tested in a Linux
environment; the software on which they depend can readily be compiled
for Windows environments (and in most cases are currently distributed as
both source code and Windows binaries). We intend the majority of the
development for BitCurator to support cross-platform use of the
software. We are freely disseminating the software under an open source
(GPL, Version 3) license. BitCurator provides users with two primary
paths to integrate digital forensics tools and techniques into archival
and library workflows.
This webinar will introduce the BitCurator environment and briefly
highlight support for mounting media as read-only, creating disk images,
using Nautilus scripts to perform batch activities, generation of
Digital Forensics XML (DFXML), generation of customized reports, and
identification of sensitive data within data.
Participants who are interested in trying out the software in advance
can download and install the BitCurator environment by following the
instructions at:
http://wiki.bitcurator.net
Bio:
Christopher (Cal) Lee is Associate Professor at the School of
Information and Library Science at the University of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill. He teaches courses on archival administration; records
management; digital curation; understanding information technology for
managing digital collections; and acquiring information from digital
storage media. He is a lead organizer and instructor for the DigCCurr
Professional Institute, and he teaches professional workshops on the
application of digital forensics methods and principles to digital
acquisitions.
Cal's primary area of research is the curation of digital collections.
He is particularly interested in the professionalization of this work
and the diffusion of existing tools and methods into professional
practice. Cal developed "A Framework for Contextual Information in
Digital Collections," and edited and provided several chapters to I,
Digital: Personal Collections in the Digital Era published by the
Society of American Archivists.
Cal is Principal Investigator of BitCurator, which is developing and
disseminating open-source digital forensics tools for use by archivists
and librarians. He was also Principal Investigator of the Digital
Acquisition Learning Laboratory (DALL) project, which incorporated
digital forensics tools and methods into digital curation education. Cal
has served as Co-PI on several projects focused on preparing
professionals for digital curation: Preserving Access to Our Digital
Future: Building an International Digital Curation Curriculum
(DigCCurr), DigCCurr II: Extending an International Digital Curation
Curriculum to Doctoral Students and Practitioners; Educating Stewards of
Public Information for the 21st Century (ESOPI-21), Educating Stewards
of the Public Information Infrastructure (ESOPI2), and Closing the
Digital Curation Gap (CDCG).
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