Anyone know of resources/tips on minimally destructive disassembly of fire-damaged electronics for #forensic purposes?
Trying to pull a flash chip out of a slightly crispy [redacted] without destroying it in the process. No idea if any recoverable data survived, or if it's encrypted (which would require recovering another chip on the board to have any hope of getting a usable dump) but I'd like to at least try.
Outer housing looks to be some sort of metal (I think aluminum but can't be certain... any paint or markings are burned off, it's not rusted so probably not carbon steel, didn't melt or char so probably not zinc or plastic). Fasteners are all ferrous and seem rusted/seized up so I will probably have to drill them out.
(Focus is purely on data recovery, no need for the recovered info to be admissible as evidence or anything)
"#Forensic Architecture has documented the mass displacement of Palestinian civilians being carried out by the Israeli #military [… which] has repeatedly abused the humanitarian measures of evacuation orders, ‘safe routes’, and ‘safe zones’, and failed to comply with the laws governing their application within a wartime context. These patterns of systematic violence and destruction have forced Palestinian civilians from one unsafe area to the next." https://forensic-architecture.org/investigation/humanitarian-violence-in-gaza@israel
TITLE: Correctional Psych: Links to 15 Articles on Addressing the Mental Health Needs of Justice-Involved Individuals in Custody & the Community
Thank you Dr. Pope.
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Correctional Psych: Links to 15 Articles on Addressing the Mental Health Needs of Justice-Involved Individuals in Custody & the Community
Psychiatric Services issued the following announcement about a curated collection of articles:
Correctional Psychiatry: Addressing the Mental Health Needs of
Justice-Involved Individuals in Custody and the Community
/Editor’s Choice provides essential curated collections from recent issues of Psychiatric Services/.
The legal aims of the correctional system are to protect the community and to punish, deter, and offer rehabilitation to the offender. These goals may be at odds with the aims of psychiatric providers working in such settings. Consequently, jails and prisons can be challenging settings for the provision of mental health services for patients, providers, and the correctional staff. Even so, encounters with the criminal justice system can create opportunities for individuals with a severe mental illness, a substance use disorder, or both to obtain needed treatment that may otherwise be unavailable or difficult to access or that an individual would not choose to pursue in the community. With the development of diversion models and community-based forensic programs, such patients now have access to unique treatment strategies addressing concomitant legal and mental health needs.
This collection provides an update regarding correctional mental health care. The provision of mental health services within correctional environments continues to pose unique challenges, such as limited access to medications that are readily available in the community. Diversion programs that transition justice-involved individuals with mental illness from traditional criminal justice pathways toward treatment may reduce the burden of severe mental illness within correctional facilities and the risks to patients in such settings. At the same time, patients may be hesitant to engage in systems that they perceive to be coercive or overbearing. Innovations in meeting the mental health needs of incarcerated and justice-involved patients remain vital due to the ongoing high prevalence of mental illness and barriers to care faced by these populations. /Brian Holoyda, M.D., M.P.H./ /Jacqueline Landess, J.D., M.D./ /Lisa B. Dixon, M.D., M.P.H. /
hashlookup-forensic-analyser version 1.3 has been released - including Bloom filter improvements and bugs fixed. You can now specify the hash algorithm used for the Bloom filter sets.
hashlookup-forensic-analyser analyses a forensic target (such as a directory) to find and report files found and not found from CIRCL hashlookup public service.
Wie kann ich von einer Festplatte den Inhalt grafisch z.B. als Pixelbild darstellen? z.B. jedes Byte als Grauwert? Ich möchte eine formatierte Festplatte grafisch analysieren. Sind überall Nullen oder Einsen, oder Rest von Inhalten.
Gibt's da was? Oder stichprobenartig z.B. mit 'dd' einen Block lesen und darstellen?