Jump to: Program – Accepted Papers
Tuesday, April 1, 2025
Time | Event | |
---|---|---|
14:00-14:40 | Session Chair: Mark Scanlon | |
Exploring Dataset Diversity for GenAI Image Inpainting Localisation in Digital Forensics | Matthew Thomson, Sean McKeown, Richard Macfarlane and Petra Leimich | |
Fast Synthetic Data Generation for Case-Specific Entity Extraction in Criminal Investigations | Mads Skipanes, Nardiena Pratama, Kyle Porter and Gianluca Demartini | |
14:40-15:20 | Session Chair: Chris Hargreaves | |
Automation for digital forensics: Towards a classification model for the community | Gaëtan Michelet and Frank Breitinger | |
AutoDFBench: A Framework for AI Generated Digital Forensic Code and Tool Testing and Evaluation | Akila Shamendra Wickramasekara, Alanna Densmore, Frank Breitinger, Hudan Studiawan and Mark Scanlon | |
15:20-16:00 | Session Chair: Frank Adelstein | |
Towards Interpretable Topic Modelling as a Tool for Hypothesis-Driven Forensic Communication Analysis | Jenny Felser and Michael Spranger | |
FEAR: A Novel Framework for Representing Digital Forensic Artifacts in Knowledge Graphs | Allan Korol and Leslie Sikos | |
16:00-16:30 | Coffee Break | |
16:30-17:10 | Session Chair: Frank Breitinger | |
Concealing targeted attacks on the TLSH similarity digest scheme | Gábor Fuchs, Tamás Fülöp and Roland Nagy | |
Low-overhead and Non-invasive Electromagnetic Side-Channel Monitoring for Forensic-ready Industrial Control Systems | Buddhima Weerasinghe, Asanka Sayakkara, Kasun De Zoysa and Mark Scanlon | |
17:10-17:50 | Session Chair: John Sheppard | |
Advancing Event Reconstruction in Network Forensics: Extending and Evaluating SMB Command Fingerprinting | Jan-Niclas Hilgert and Martin Lambertz | |
Understanding Strategies and Challenges of Timestamp Tampering for Improved Digital Forensic Event Reconstruction | Céline Vanini, Jan Gruber, Christopher Hargreaves, Zinaida Benenson, Felix Freiling and Frank Breitinger |
Accepted Papers
- AutoDFBench: A Framework for AI Generated Digital Forensic Code and Tool Testing and Evaluation
Akila Wickramasekara (School of Computer Science, University College Dublin), Alanna Densmore (Florida State University), Frank Breitinger (Institute of Computer Science, University of Augsburg), Hudan Studiawan (Department of Informatics, Institut Teknologi Sepuluh Nopember), Mark Scanlon (School of Computer Science, University College Dublin) - Fast Synthetic Data Generation for Case-Specific Entity Extraction in Criminal Investigations
Mads Skipanes (The National Criminal Investigation Service (Kripos)), Nardiena Pratama (School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, The University of Queensland), Kyle Porter (Department of Information Security and Communication Technology, The Norwegian University of Science and Technology), Gianluca Demartini (School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, The University of Queensland)
- Concealing targeted attacks on the TLSH similarity digest scheme
Gábor Fuchs, Tamás Fülöp and Roland Nagy (CrySyS Lab, Budapest University of Technology and Economics)
- Towards Interpretable Topic Modelling as a Tool for Hypothesis-Driven Forensic Communication Analysis
Jenny Felser and Michael Spranger (University of Applied Sciences Mittweida)
- Low-overhead and Non-invasive Electromagnetic Side-Channel Monitoring for Forensic-ready Industrial Control Systems
Buddhima Weerasinghe, Asanka Sayakkara and Kasun De Zoysa (University of Colombo School of Computing), Mark Scanlon (School of Computer Science, University College Dublin)
- Advancing Event Reconstruction in Network Forensics: Extending and Evaluating SMB Command Fingerprinting
Jan-Niclas Hilgert and Martin Lambertz (Fraunhofer FKIE) - Exploring Dataset Diversity for GenAI Image Inpainting Localisation in Digital Forensics
Matthew Thomson, Sean McKeown, Richard Macfarlane, Petra Leimich (Edinburgh Napier University)
- Automation for digital forensics: Towards a classification model for the community
Gaëtan Michelet (School of Criminal Justice, University of Lausanne), Frank Breitinger (Institute of Computer Science, University of Augsburg) - FEAR: A Novel Framework for Representing Digital Forensic Artifacts in Knowledge Graphs
Allan Korol and Leslie F. Sikos (School of Science, Edith Cowan University)