Date:
August 6th, 7th, and 8th
Place:
Cleveland Marriott Downtown at Key Center.
Room Cost:
100 guest rooms have been reserved at a special conference rate of $149.00 per night for non-government employed attendees and $86.00 per night for government-employed attendees.
Room deadlines:
Please honor this pricing arrangement and do not attempt to receive the government rate without proper identification and/or government travel orders. In order to ensure room availability we ask that your room reservation be completed by July 6, 2003. On July 7, 2003 all of the remaining guest rooms will be released to the general public and availability will be limited. If making a reservation, please mention DFRWS.
Conference fee
US $325.00 up to and including Sunday July 6, 2003.
After July 6, 2003 the conference fee will increase to US $375.00
DFRWS Challenge on Honeynet
The Digital Forensic
Research Workshop, or DFRWS, was initiated in August 2001 to bring academic
researchers and digital forensic investigators and practitioners together
for active discussion that addresses three major objectives:
-
Define the need
and create the processes for the incorporation of a rigorous scientific
method as a fundamental tenant of the evolving discipline of Digital Forensic
Science
-
Develop a research
agenda that considers practitioner requirements, multiple investigative
environments and emphasizes real world usability
-
The discovery,
explanation and presentation of conclusive, persuasive evidence that will
meet the heightened scrutiny of the courts and other decision-makers in
military and civilian environments
To meet these objectives the DFRWS Mission Statement was drafted and covers the following items:
- Initiate a dynamic community of experts from academia and practice
- Promote scholarly discussion related to digital forensic research and its application
- Involve experienced analysts and examiners from law enforcement, military and civilian sectors
- Define core technologies that form a focus for useful research and development
- Establish and expand a common lexicon so the community speaks the same language
- Engage in regular debate and collaborative activity to ensure a sharp focus, high interest, and efficacy
DFRWS activities
center around the need to enhance and promote the application of the scientific
method in research and practice in Digital Forensic Science. As such,
efforts strive to discover, define, and foster fundamental scientific principles
that will support investigations of digital "wrongdoing" from all perspectives.