Open University launches cybercrime course
By Brian Turner
January 21, 2008
If a malicious employee stole data from your organisation, would you have the skills to detect it? Could you gather evidence that would help the authorities prosecute a criminal case? Would you be able to produce the evidence to handle a disputed transaction, or a misbehaving employee?
In this digital age we live in, computing security and business IT processes are under more scrutiny and pressure than ever before.
A new postgraduate course from The Open University is now available to equip professionals with a basic understanding of this complex field.
Computer Forensics and Investigations provides an introduction to the world of digital evidence collection, forensic computing and IT incident management.
The course will enable people to know what to do in the first initial stages of investigation - being a ‘First Responder’ to a situation and helping an organisation prepare for problems before they happen.
Carefully constructed to balance the legal and technical aspects of this area, the course is relevant to IT professionals wishing to broaden their skill set, human resources managers who need to understand the issues and legal professionals seeking a new challenge.
Specially commissioned material has been written by a legal and technical expert in the field, Peter Sommer, who has acted as an expert witness in high-profile cases ranging from terrorism and fraud, Internet child abuse and international hacking to corporate espionage, defamation and murder. Peter also has had experience in Westminster and Whitehall as
a specialist advisor.
Students on the course will learn the essentials behind identifying, acquiring, preserving and analysing evidence and gain an overview of relevant law.
They will use authentic computer forensic tools during investigations of specially prepared scenarios that replicate real-life situations, developed with input from digital forensic consultancy Evidence Talks Ltd.
This course will give a good grounding in forensic computing and equip students for further study. It is a 15-point postgraduate level course which can be used towards a postgraduate qualification. The first presentation of the course starts in May 2008, with registration closing at the end of March. The course will run again in November 2008.


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