What is the IFCI Cybercrime Investigator’s Course? IFCIs flagship training program is the IFCI-CCI (Cybercrime Investigator) Training course. The IFCI-CCI teaches students the skills necessary to respond to all kinds of cybercrime incidents, from initial incident response and digital crime scene evidence acquisition to advanced forensic analysis and tracking International cybercriminals across the Internet. The main goal for this course is to empower the nations cyber investigators with the knowledge, skills and abilities to undertake and successfully carry out their own investigations. This course is the first step for investigators to turn the tables on cyber criminals who are fleecing legitimate economies worldwide of billions of dollars every year. Some Course highlights include: 15 hands-on labs - devised of real world scenarios Analysis of Windows forensic artifacts Volatile memory analysis Network intrusion investigations Internet activity and email analysis Network traffic data analysis International cybercriminal profiling Attack vector identification Dynamic malware analysis Who Should Take this course? Anybody whose job requires them to respond to cyber incidents, or anyone with an interest in cybercrime investigation, should take the IFCI-CCI training course. This course will help you by providing fast solutions to the following emergency situations: Corporate Risk/Security - Intellectual Property Theft Case: Your Research and Development Director quits and goes to work for a competitor. Can you determine if he copied your companys secrets to a USB drive to take with him? Police Investigations - Kidnapping Case: A child is taken from his home at night and the family receives an email with a proof-of-life picture and ransom demand. Can you extract IP addresses from the email headers to track the offender back to his location, or extract lat/long coordinates from the pictures EXIF data to determine the exact location the picture was taken? IT Security Team - Rogue Malware Case: You discover malware on an internal corporate computer but you dont know what it does or why its there. Can you analyze the malware, determine its capabilities, identify its target data, and destroy its data exfiltration file before your corporate proprietary information is lost? Federal Cyber Agent - Botnet Investigation Case: Youve tracked botnet malware back to a specific set of command and control servers, but whats the next step? Can you determine the servers physical location in the world and research current and historical whois information? Are you able to research other malicious domains associated with the same IP address and track Command and Control proxy servers back to specific malicious actors? E-Discovery Analyst - File access case: Youve recovered and indexed thousands of PDF files on a computer. One was flagged as key to the case and you are asked if the computer owner knew of and accessed this file. Can you examine the Windows registry and link files to determine the exact time and date that specific users accessed individual files? Why take this course? Cybercrime is epidemic. The headlines declare it daily: 2015 - SONY is devastated by an attack that destroys its internal systems, steals terabytes of private data, posts unreleased movies on Internet torrent sites, and humiliates corporate executives. The cost to corporate image and revenue stream is uncountable. 2014 - Home Depot is hacked, losing an estimated 55 million credit cards to the cybercrime underground. 2013 - Russian Hackers steal 40 million credit cards from Target, resulting in approx $1 billion in losses to the company. 2012 - The Shamoon virus destroys nearly 30,000 Saudi Aramco Computers, temporarily shutting down one of the worlds largest corporations. 2011 - SONY data breach lost personal details and payment information for approximately 77 million customers, resulting in massive monetary loss and the temporary closure of the PlayStation Gaming Network. The corporations victimized in these situations were unprepared to respond to the attacks causing delayed investigations and reduced information flow to decision-making executives. Eventually, they contracted out the investigations to high-priced consultants, whose investigative results were often too little, too late. IFCI-CCIs mission is to provide our students the knowledge and skills necessary to respond to network attacks immediately, analyze the evidence, produce actionable cyber-intelligence, and implement it to shore up security vulnerabilities before they become massive breaches like those mentioned above. There is a dearth of quality training in computer forensics, even less for hacker and malware focused investigations, and almost nothing that is available in a convenient online format that can be studied from the comfort of your own home, and fit to your own schedule. IFCI fills this void by providing the finest cybercrime investigation training in the world, created and delivered by some of the worlds foremost experts in their field, and strea