6533b829fe1ef96bd1289a38

RESEARCH PRODUCT

An Ontology-Based Approach for the Reconstruction and Analysis of Digital Incidents Timelines

Tahar KechadiAurélie BertauxYoan ChabotChristophe Nicolle

subject

[INFO.INFO-AI] Computer Science [cs]/Artificial Intelligence [cs.AI][INFO.INFO-WB] Computer Science [cs]/WebComputer scienceOntology PopulationDigital forensics[INFO.INFO-OH]Computer Science [cs]/Other [cs.OH][ INFO.INFO-WB ] Computer Science [cs]/Web02 engineering and technologyEvent ReconstructionOntology (information science)[INFO.INFO-AI]Computer Science [cs]/Artificial Intelligence [cs.AI]SoftwareKnowledge extraction[INFO.INFO-CY]Computer Science [cs]/Computers and Society [cs.CY]020204 information systemsForensic OntologyTimeline Analysis0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineering[ INFO.INFO-AI ] Computer Science [cs]/Artificial Intelligence [cs.AI]Event reconstructionKnowledge Extractionbusiness.industry[INFO.INFO-WB]Computer Science [cs]/WebTimelineComputer forensicsData scienceComputer Science Applications[ INFO.INFO-CY ] Computer Science [cs]/Computers and Society [cs.CY][INFO.INFO-OH] Computer Science [cs]/Other [cs.OH]Medical Laboratory TechnologyIdentification (information)Digital Forensics[INFO.INFO-CY] Computer Science [cs]/Computers and Society [cs.CY][ INFO.INFO-OH ] Computer Science [cs]/Other [cs.OH]020201 artificial intelligence & image processingbusinessLaw

description

International audience; Due to the democratisation of new technologies, computer forensics investigators have to deal with volumes of data which are becoming increasingly large and heterogeneous. Indeed, in a single machine, hundred of events occur per minute, produced and logged by the operating system and various software. Therefore, the identification of evidence, and more generally, the reconstruction of past events is a tedious and time-consuming task for the investigators. Our work aims at reconstructing and analysing automatically the events related to a digital incident, while respecting legal requirements. To tackle those three main problems (volume, heterogeneity and legal requirements), we identify seven necessary criteria that an efficient reconstruction tool must meet to address these challenges. This paper introduces an approach based on a three-layered ontology, called ORD2I, to represent any digital events. ORD2I is associated with a set of operators to analyse the resulting timeline and to ensure the reproducibility of the investigation.

https://hal.science/hal-01176091