Sunday, November 28, 2010

Just a Quick Post

I was reading Harlan's blog tonight and saw his reference to Corey's blog post about timeline analysis and using the Calc spreadsheet program in OpenOffice.org to view the timeline.  He had run into the 65,000 row limit in Calc when his 100,000+ line timeline was truncated.

He got around that by testing a release candidate for OpenOffice 3.3, which does support a million rows.  Version 3.2.1. is still the actual current version, but apparently 3.3 will be out soon.  I went to the OpenOffice site tonight to try to download a copy of the release candidate, but all the links to the RC were taken down in preparation for the release of RC 7, so I wasn't able to check it out.

I ran into the 65,000 row issue awhile back while reviewing the output from Mark Menz's MFTRipper program.  Given the low budget outfit I work for, I don't have Microsoft Office, which started supporting more than a million rows with Office 2007.  I did some searching at the time to find the answer to my problem and came up with a version of OpenOffice called Go-OO.  The version of Calc included with it has support for a million rows.

That's all I have right now, but thought I should get this out there in case anyone else was in the same boat.

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Back on track

A day later than planned, but I'm finally back on here and adding some content. I've gotten a lot of positive feedback regarding starting the blog and I really appreciate that.

A great deal is going on in my life these days with regards to digital forensics and it's really exciting. First, not many know this, but I'm co-writing a book with two very good friends, Brad Garnett and Joe Garcia. The title will be The Basics of Digital Forensics. We just recently got started, so lots to do yet. We're trying to write the book we wished we had back when we were first getting started. More on this later!

Next, I got a surprise phone call from the local junior college a few days ago asking if I'd be interested in helping develop and teach a computer forensics course. I'm very excited by the possibilities and plan to meet with them next week to discuss it further.

Meanwhile, I continue reading the Malware Analysts Cookbook in my spare (ha!) time. Kudos to Michael Hale Ligh, Steven Adair, Blake Hartstein and Matthew Richard for creating this excellent book. I'm only up to chapter 7 at this point, but I'm finding it very interesting indeed. I like the writing style and the exercises and examples are very well done. I do wish I had a background in programming, especially javascript and Python, just so I would better understand some things I've read so far. However, the way the book is written helps make up for my lack of programming knowledge.

Finally, I repaired my sisters computer recently when it had a rogue defrag program on it. This is similar to the rogue antivirus programs, but instead of bogus virus infection reports, the rogue defrag pretends to scan your hard drive and finds all sorts of dire problems with the drive and the file system. What it's really doing during the "scan" is installing itself to your hard drive, complete with program group in the All Programs listing and icons. They only want $80 to register the defrag so it can fix the physical errors on your hard drive...what a deal!
Prior to starting the removal process, I imaged RAM using windd and then imaged the hard drive. I created a Super Timeline from the drive image, though I haven't had sufficient time since doing it to really look it over. I also used the excellent Volatility Framework to look at the memory image. I was able to find some interesting info in that, which I'll detail in a near-future blogpost, along with other details of the malware I found. But for now, it's late and I'm tired, so I'm ending this post here.  I hope everyone has a great Thanksgiving!

Sunday, November 21, 2010

Welcome

Welcome to the new Digital Forensics Blog!  You're probably thinking we don't need another forensics blog and you might be right.  Still, I find there are times I'm researching some forensic and/or malware artifacts and learn something I think is worth sharing.

My plan to keep this blog focused on  computer and malware forensics, as those are my primary interests these days.  In addition to this, I also write for the SANS Forensic Blog but thought I'd start my own for when I want to write about something that doesn't really fit in there.

I intend to add some actual content today or tomorrow, so in the immortal words of Paul Harvey, stand by for news!  I welcome comments, but try to be nice  ;-)