Network Forensics Primer
Identifying When One VoIP Call Is “One Too Many”
![]() |
White Paper: Network Forensics 101: Finding the Needle in the HaystackThink network forensics is just for security? Think again. This white paper defines network forensics, dispels some common misperceptions, and describes what you could and should be using it for. |
![]() |
White Paper: Network Forensics: How to Optimize Your Digital InvestigationLearn how a network forensics solution with four basic elements - data capture, data discovery, data analysis, and data recording - reduces your mean time to resolution when a problem is reported or detected. This paper covers three phases of digital investigation: separating network data, performing packet drill-down, and enumerating the data. |
![]() |
OnDemand Webcast: Network Forensics - Your Only Choice at 10GWatch this in-depth analysis to see how network forensics need not only be security oriented, but also works equally well in identifying spikes in utilization, drops in VoIP call quality and increased latency, whether network or application. At 10G speeds this isn't easy to accomplish, but with network forensics you'll make quick work of it. |
![]() |
OnDemand Webcast: 24/7 Distributed Network Monitoring for Real-Time and Post-Capture AnalysisWhen business runs on the network–as it does now in almost every industry–network downtime and performance degradation become mission-critical problems, affecting productivity, revenue, and relationships with customers and partners. In this webcast, see how to build distributed, intelligent network analysis into your infrastructure, so that you're collecting information vital for management and troubleshooting. |
![]() |
Video: Forensic Search: Finding the Critical PacketsSomething's happened in your network, but you don't know exactly what. Find out how to use network forensics to reconstruct critical packets on your network. |
Network forensics isn't just for troubleshooting or solving network security problems. With today's increasingly interconnected, always online workforce, it's often business-critical issues that have nothing to do with performance or cyber attacks, for example, violations of industry regulations or data breaches that drive the need for post-incident analysis.
Whether accidental or malicious, the time to start capturing the digital evidence is before a specific event actually happens. To quickly get to the root cause once an event has started or worse, after the fact, when you become aware that an event has occurred, your network forensic solution needs four basic elements - data capture, data discovery, data analysis, and data recording - so that you have the historical data you need at your fingertips. You also need to be able to quickly sift through various data, using a variety of parameters such as source/destination IP address, source/destination port, time, date, protocol, string, and more, and perform analyses. Is your network forensic solution up for the challenge?