Objective
The main objective
of this seminar is to train EU legal practitioners on the fundamentals
of computer forensics enabling them to gain an understanding of the
complex challenges related to criminal cases with tech/internet
components. This seminar will focus on open-source intelligence tools
and forensic analysis.
Key topics
- Open source intelligence tools (OSITs)
- Technical issues (internet caches, proxy servers, encryption, etc.)
- The Web, the Dark/Deep Web and sources of evidence available online
- Online investigations: websites and social media
- Legal aspects of computer forensics
About the Project
This
seminar is part of a large-scale project sponsored by the European
Commission entitled “Basic computer forensics skills for EU legal
practitioners: practice-oriented training courses to meet the challenges
of new technologies”. It consists of six seminars to take place in
Vilnius, Lisbon, Zagreb, Prague, Barcelona and Trier.
Who should attend?
Judges,
prosecutors and lawyers in private practice from eligible EU Member
States (UK and Denmark do not participate in the Justice Programme
2014-2020).
Participation Conditions
-
Registration fee: €250 including documentation, lunches and dinner.
- Travel costs up to €350 and two nights' hotel accommodation will be
reimbursed by ERA upon receipt of the original receipts, tickets,
boarding passes, invoices after the seminar.
-
The number of places available is limited (30 places). Target group:
judges, prosecutors and lawyers in private practice. Participation will
be subject to a selection procedure. Selection will be first come first
served and according to nationality.
- A response will be sent to every applicant after the deadline. We advise
you not to book any travel or hotel before you receive our
confirmation.
-
Participants are asked to book their own travel and accommodation.
Spanish applicants who work for the prosecution service (CEJ) must apply
for this event through CEJ.
-
Participants should come from eligible EU Member States (UK and Denmark do not participate in the Justice Programme 2014-2020).