Digital forensic teams and laboratories are now common place within Australia, particularly associated with law enforcement and intelligence agencies. The digital forensics discipline is rapidly evolving to become a scientific practice with domain-specific guideline. These guidelines are still under discussion in an attempt to progress the discipline so as to become as solid and robust in its scientific underpinnings as other forensic disciplines. Influential players, practitioners and observers all agree that rigorous standards need to be adopted to align this science with other forensic sciences. How does one assess the scientific nature of digital forensics with so many independent computing and IT elements combined, and what are the outcomes of each assessment method? Solutions are proposed regularly justifying their use but to date no one international or national standard exists. This paper does not propose a solution but rather explores the concept of Validation and Verification (V&V) with particular respect to digital forensic tools. The paper also explores ISO17025 "General requirements for the competence of testing and calibration laboratories" and develops the testing process to satisfy this standard to allow for Australian digital forensic laboratories to be eligible for certification.
Citation:
Tom Wilsdon, Jill Slay, "Digital Forensics: Exploring Validation, Verification and Certification," sadfe, pp.48-55, First International Workshop on Systematic Approaches to Digital Forensic Engineering (SADFE'05), 2005