NewsPronto

 

USA Conversation

The Conversation USA

The Conversation USA

There's no code of ethics to govern digital forensics – and we need one

  • Written by The Conversation

Authors: The Conversation

imageHow to deal with all that digital evidence?West Midlands Police, CC BY-SA

Let me begin with a disclaimer: I am neither a digital forensics practitioner nor do I play one on television.

I am, however, a professor in, and former chair of, an academic department at a research university that houses a graduate program in...

Read more: There's no code of ethics to govern digital forensics – and we need one

More Articles ...

  1. How Ferguson and #BlackLivesMatter taught us not to look away
  2. How can we support kids in learning more than one language?
  3. Rather than make energy more expensive, it's time to invest in the technologies of tomorrow
  4. Lackluster jobs growth and stagnant wages show why the Fed shouldn't raise interest rates just yet
  5. The shaming of Walter Palmer for killing Cecil the Lion
  6. Fox News debate weak on race, sour on Trump
  7. The little-known history of secrecy and censorship in wake of atomic bombings
  8. Can't seem to stop those ads following you around? Why not become 'metaliterate'?
  9. Calvin Klein's new sexting ads are not only unethical, they may not even be effective
  10. Taking plants off planet – how do they grow in zero gravity?
  11. The curtain falls on Jon Stewart, America's favorite jester
  12. How American journalists covered the first use of the atomic bomb
  13. Statistics professors give Fox News a B- on their big polling test
  14. Delta cities, wealthy or not, face rising risk from sinking land
  15. What do zombies, pandemics and the price of eggs have in common?
  16. Even before Hiroshima, people knew the atomic bomb
  17. The deep influence of the A-bomb on anime and manga
  18. If a female president is good for the Ivy League, why not for the rest of us?
  19. You can post debate questions on Facebook, but Fox News will decide what gets asked
  20. The withering of the culture war
  21. How should we define success for the EPA Clean Power Plan?
  22. Do we need a solar power technology breakthrough?
  23. New York state's program to eliminate mother-to-child HIV transmission could work around the world
  24. Prix fixe: is airline consolidation to blame for sky-high airfares?
  25. Let's face it: gender bias in academia is for real
  26. 'Zero-day' stockpiling puts us all at risk
  27. Recreating language's Big Bang through a game of vocal charades
  28. Why legal challenges to the EPA Clean Power Plan will end up at the Supreme Court
  29. Polling is more complex than Fox News boss Roger Ailes wants you to know
  30. Four things that you should know about the EPA Clean Power Plan
  31. Obama builds legacy on climate change with EPA Clean Power Plan
  32. Pushing students to take Advanced Placement courses does not help anyone
  33. Can corporate America solve growing problem of youth unemployment?
  34. Big Data analyses depend on starting with clean data points
  35. Why Medicare should reimburse doctors for end-of-life care conversations
  36. The green and the gold: can we soften the environmental impact of the Olympics?
  37. Can math solve the congressional districting problem?
  38. 'Banning the box' would help people released from prison rebuild their lives
  39. After Cincinnati, the big question: who are the campus police, anyway?
  40. Your mobile phone knows where you go and what you do – and maybe even when you're feeling down
  41. Will the administration’s congressional testimony on Iran tilt the balance?
  42. How conservatives and liberals watch 'I am Cait'
  43. You don't need a dictator to host a successful Olympics, just a strong leader
  44. As biodiversity declines on corn farms, pest problems grow
  45. Academic entrepreneurs' intellectual property strategies should include more than only patents
  46. An early expression of democracy, the US patent system is out of step with today's citizens