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Hill, J. M. D., et. al. (2001), Using an isolated network laboratory to teach advanced networks and security, in `SIGCSE Bulletin', ACM Press.

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Computer Forensics: Training and Education - Erbacher   (Correct)

....physical space prevents physical intrusions into the systems. A segregated network is required to prevent cyber intrusions into the systems. Such intrusions can cause loss of information and corruption of tasks in progress. An extensive discussion on the needs for an isolated network is found in [6, 7]. Hardware requirements. The environment will require several workstations with hot swappable drive bays for students to experiment on. The hot swappable drive bays will be used for the drives to be forensically analyzed. Several target machines must also be available to explore the feasibility ....

....expert. The difficulty in this scenario results from the sensitive nature of the information and the need to maintain privacy for the individuals involved. Obfuseate versus discovery contest. This can be considered a derivative of attack defend scenarios from typical computer security courses [6, 7]. The goal is for one team to attempt to hide information within a computer system and for a second team to locate and decode the information without violating any computer forensic principles, i.e. modifying the system in any way. Only by exploring both sides of the problem can an individual ....

J. M.D. Hill, J. W. Humphdes, C.A. Carver, Jr., and U. W. Pooch, "Using an Isolated Network Laboratory to Teach Advanced Networks and Security," Proceedings of the 32nd SIGCSE Technical Symposium on Computer Science Education, Charlotte, North Carolina, February 21-25, 2001, pp. 36-40.


TinkerNet: A Low-Cost and Ready-To-Deploy Networking - Laboratory Platform Titus   (Correct)

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Hill, J. M. D., et. al. (2001), Using an isolated network laboratory to teach advanced networks and security, in `SIGCSE Bulletin', ACM Press.


Using Minix to Teach Computer Security Courses - Wenliang Du And   (Correct)

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J. M. D. Hill, C. A. C. Jr., J. W. Humphries, and U. W. Pooch. Using an isolated network laboratory to teach advanced networks and security. In Proceedings of the 32nd SIGCSE pages 36--40, Charlotte, NC, USA, February 2001.

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