Do you think most computer criminals in the future will resort to such scapegoat tactics? If the hacker who know the authorities are onto him **deliberately** installs a Trojan as insurance how can computer forensic experts know that? (Trojans are many times installed by the unaware user. But this time it's deliberate.) I believe it goes beyond forensics.
Von ---poster of the above question
Do you think most computer criminals in the future will resort to such scapegoat
tactics? If the hacker who know the authorities are onto him deliberately
installs a Trojan as insurance how can computer forensic experts know that?
(Trojans are many times installed by the unaware user. But this time it's deliberate.)
I believe it goes beyond forensics.
Do you think most computer criminals in the future will resort to such scapegoat tactics? If the hacker who know the authorities are onto him **deliberately** installs a Trojan as insurance how can computer forensic experts know that? (Trojans are many times installed by the unaware user. But this time it's deliberate.) I believe it goes beyond forensics. Von ---poster of the above question
Do you think most computer criminals in the future will resort to such scapegoat tactics? If the hacker who know the authorities are onto him deliberately installs a Trojan as insurance how can computer forensic experts know that? (Trojans are many times installed by the unaware user. But this time it's deliberate.) I believe it goes beyond forensics.
Von (<---poster of the article),