Guidance Software to lead defense seminar

Published: Jan. 16, 2008 at 9:25 AM
Order reprints
PASADENA, Calif., Jan. 16 (UPI) -- California-based Guidance Software Inc. announced it will lead an intrusion investigation seminar at the U.S. Department of Defense Cyber Crime Conference.

Guidance Software is a digital investigative solutions provider for government, corporate and law enforcement organizations to conduct network-enabled and court-validated computer investigations. The company has been selected to lead a seminar at the U.S. Department of Defense Cyber Crime Conference 2008 on how to manage the complexities of large-scale intrusion investigations.

The Department of Defense Cyber Crime Conference is an effort to bring law enforcement, counterintelligence and information assurance specialists together for the latest in cybercrime training and education.

The seminar, led by Jim Butterworth, Guidance Software director of incident response and federal services, is called "Large Scale Incident Response Best Practices and Case Study Analysis." Company officials say the seminar will cover topics such as "malware analysis, tips for assembling an effective team during an investigation and identifying and containing affected machines," the release said.

The conference is being held in St. Louis through Jan. 18.


© 2008 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.


Jockstrip: The world as we know it. (<1 min)
Your Daily Horoscope
The almanac
Panetta: Congress not told of CIA program
Biden goes on the road to defend stimulus
The two-edged sword of online games
Rio Tinto employees face spy charges
fark
Over a 30-day period, U.S. Marshalls arrested over 35k figitives netting 2,356 sex-offenders, 433...
Tennessee Aquarium presents a bowl full of ugly-ass baby penguin. A little milk and we'll have a...
Judge allows Twitter-using DA to 'tweet' upcoming muder trial over defense objections. Prosecution's...
Photoshop theme: The end of the universe
NY Times thinks their website users would pay five bucks per month. Listen, for the last time, no...
Fewer calories allow monkeys to live longer. Good thing you're not a monkey