Computer Forensics and Cyber Crime: An Introduction (2nd Edition) | 
enlarge | Author: Marjie T. Britz Publisher: Prentice Hall Category: Book
List Price: $61.20 Buy New: $44.50 You Save: $16.70 (27%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 4 reviews Sales Rank: 31641
Media: Paperback Edition: 2 Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 408 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.2 Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 6.9 x 0.9
ISBN: 0132447495 Dewey Decimal Number: 363.25 EAN: 9780132447492 ASIN: 0132447495
Publication Date: October 17, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Condition: Pristine Condition. Fast shipping!
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Product Description Completely updated in a new edition, this book fully defines computer-related crime and the legal issues involved in its investigation. Re-organized with different chapter headings for better understanding of the subject, it provides a framework for the development of a computer crime unit. Updated with new information on technology, this book is the only comprehensive examination of computer-related crime and its investigation on the market. It includes an exhaustive discussion of legal and social issues, fully defines computer crime, and provides specific examples of criminal activities involving computers, while discussing the phenomenon in the context of the criminal justice system. Computer Forensics and Cyber Crime 2e provides a comprehensive analysis of current case law, constitutional challenges, and government legislation. New to this edition is a chapter on Organized Crime & Terrorism and how it relates to computer related crime as well as more comprehensive information on Processing Evidence and Report Preparation. For computer crime investigators, police chiefs, sheriffs, district attorneys, public defenders, and defense attorneys.
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| Customer Reviews:
Great 2nd edition January 4, 2009 This book clearly and comprehensively complements the first edition. the new chapters on ID theft and organized crime are a welcome addition. I have been anxiously awaiting the second edition, and it DOES NOT DISAPPOINT. BRAVO!!
Great undergraduate book May 23, 2005 1 out of 3 found this review helpful
This particular book by Britz, is but one more example of her commitment to detail in all of her works. Like her previous books, this book is both readable and comprehensive. It is one that I myself have adopted in my computer crime course, and I am anxiously awaiting the second edition. The chapters on the legal issues and the history of computer crime are unparalleled in the extant literature. More succinctly, the greatest strength of the book is its' sheer readibility. Designed for undergraduates, this particular text is a must read for any beginner interested in computer crime and computer investigations. Unlike other books in the field which prove to be far too advanced for novices, Britz's book allows even the most unsophisticated reader to appreciate and understand the problems associated with the investigation of computer crime, as well as recognize emerging trends in this area. Please, please, provide a second edition as soon as possible!!
Well Done March 11, 2005 2 out of 3 found this review helpful
"Computer Forensics and Cyber Crime," written by Marjie T. Britz and, publish by Pearson Education Inc., seems to be a very well balance book, why? It just took me few minutes, between reading the introductory notes and "browsing" to its chapters, to understand that this book is well sequenced and organized.
This author explains in rather a pleasant way this subject and gradually internalizes the students by attracting them to a more extensive regions of Computer forensics, as it is data analysis, reporting or computer investigations.
This is an important and interesting field, that is capturing the attention of many professionals and envolves many disciplines, I just read the other day in one of those infamous blogs, "Computer Archeologists are using new and powerful computer forensics tools to examine and gain understanding of 'lifted data' that apparently was written 25 years ago." Nevertheless, this author seems to have made all the efforts to bring comprehensiveness by illuminating fundamental relationships,** not only between computer history and cyber crime, if not among many issues surrounding the applications of the fourth amendment and the understanding of the limits of government decency.
The management of these seemingly intricate relationships is crucial for our immediate future, as a nation, experiencing a yet unexplored global economy which is using extensively and intensively the eCommerce over intranets, internets and the Internet, and as a nation, which some how needs to preserve the individual freedoms and leadership that rightly so, has been acquired through all its years of existence, with hard work, determination and within the framework of its fundamental democratic values.
The author closes this book by looking at the world's future issues with respect to cyber crime and even gives us routes by which we could answers most of the urgent and pressing dilemmas of our digital epoch. Do you want to know the answer, well read the book yourself and find out what this book offers.
In conclusion, this book is readable, manages and balances many aspects of this new subject, besides it seems as a good starting point and a splendid reference, from which any student can continue to build their expertise on computer forensics and Cyber crime. ** [even the use of technology to commit crimes is well referenced by this book, I observed a photograph of Bonnie and Clyde, who used then the recently invented automobile for outsmart the police of their times, p. 31]
Sadly Dated October 19, 2004 3 out of 5 found this review helpful
This would have been a superb book if it had been published in 2001 or so. Coverage is wide and quite detailed -- unfortunately, it appears the research for the book was done in 2000 (that's the publication date of the msot recent references in the bibliography)and a lot of things have changed since then. The chapters on case law and the actual process of collecting and analyzing evidence are excellent and serve to whet our appetite for an up-to-date book with that kind of detailed coverage. Insofar as many of the best principles in evidence collection and anlysis are the old ones, this book is quite useful but it is certainly not a state of current practice presentation.
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