Multimedia Forensic
November 22nd, 2007
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Multimedia is becoming an integral part of our daily life. It is a means for us to communicate important information with each other, as well as a way to express our creative sides. The information and art contained inside media have economic value, personal value, and often broader impacts on the general welfare of our society. Since the Internet has become increasingly widespread, and now reaches into our everyday actions, it is easy to foresee that our modern communication networks will become the means for distributing multimedia content. In Malaysia closed circuit television (CCTV) surveillance is an increasing feature of our daily lives. There is an ongoing debate over how effective CCTV is in reducing and preventing crime, but one thing is certain, its deployment is commonplace in a variety of areas to which members of the public have free access. We might be caught on camera while walking down the high street, visiting a shop or bank or traveling through a railway station or airport. One issue that has arises in recent  months has been the use of old security systems that capture blur images which in most cases  failed to help police in their investigations.
 

The lack of system maintenance & system upgrades , outdates features, ensuring time and date are correct , quality of picture and recording methods have made the function of security surveillance redundant. Sometimes, an outdated camera is like an old pair of glasses: Everything looked great before, but when you put on new glasses, you are amazed by what you were missing. Cameras, monitors, card readers and other “forgotten” devices often make their inadequacies clear when compared with a newer model.

 

Multimedia forensic is course is to provide law enforcement agents and corporate security personnel with systematic guidance that can help them understand some of the issues that arise when they seek electronic evidence in criminal and civil investigations. On the 10th of December Worldwide Corporate Resources (WCR) Sdn Bhd is running a 5 days day training, that teachers participants how to able to respond to real live incidents and help determine whether the incident has actually occurred through: analyzing, collecting and preserving plus submitting the evidence, Best Practices for Forensics Investigation and Hands on experience on using tools in Digital Forensic Investigation. For further information please call 03-2615 4506 or 03-2282 3448