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© 2012 McAfee Institute® D-1
7 Day Job Aide & Quick Tips
Presented and Prepared by: Joshua McAfee
Chesterfield, MO • 636-681-1459
McAfee Institute®
CHESTERFIELD • CHARLOTTE • SAINT LOUIS • PEORIA
Search Engines
Search engines are algorithmic information retrieval systems that allow searching of massive web-based
databases. A web search engine is designed to search for information on the World Wide Web and FTP
servers. The search results are generally presented in a list of results and are often called hits. The
information may consist of web pages, images, information and other types of files.
Google,
Bing,
Yahoo,
AOL Search,
AlltheWeb.com,
Ask Jeeves,
Excite,
Lycos,
Alta Vista
Search Engine Tutorials
http://www.googleguide.com/advanced_operators_reference.html
http://www.googleguide.com/
http://tothepointresearch.com/
http://www.tothepc.com/archives/10-bing-search-tips-features-for-better-searching/
http://malektips.com/bing_search_engine_help_and_tips.html
http://www.websightcreations.com/search_engine_tips.html
http://www.cnet.com/4520-10165_1-6415447-1.html
http://www.google.com/support/websearch/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=136861
Google Hacks
Tara Calishain, RaelDornfestPublisher: O'Reilly Media
http://oreilly.com/catalog/9780596004477
Search Techniques
+-
Quotations
Keyword Order and lowercase
Truncation (*)
Allinbody, [ allinbody:keyword] (Allintitle, Allinurl)
Boolean logic
Enclose OR statements in parentheses.
Always use CAPS Most engines require that the operators (AND, OR, AND NOT/NOT) be
capitalized.
http://www.internettutorials.net/boolean.asp
Digital Evidence
Always copy urls, because sometimes you can’t backtrack
Google updates its results constantly and with the more than 20 billion websites out there, you may
never find the same info again.
Take screenshots of content, or consider making use of CAMTASIA, a screen recorder and editing
software program.
Camtasia Studio
Archive.org
History Of A Website
Doesn’t include adult
Not a complete archive
You can remove yourself from the machine with robots.txt
Meta Search Engines
Search engines that search other search engines and directories. They extract the best of the searches
from various popular search engines and directories and include the information in their own search
results.
Dog pile,
WebCrawler,
Excite,
MetaCrawler, and
Ixquick
Directories
Search engines that search other search engines and directories. They extract the best of the searches
from various popular search engines and directories and include the information in their own search
results.
Yahoo Directory
LookSmart
Open Directory (DMOZ.org)
Wikipedia
Gateways
Collections of databases and informational sites assembled, reviewed and recommended by specialists
used to access this material
Invisible Web
Large portion of the Web that search engine spiders cannot index - 60-80% of web material
Pass-protected sites,
Documents behind firewalls, archived material,
The contents of certain databases,
Information that isn't static but assembled dynamically in response to specific queries
Subject-Specific Databases (Vortals) are devoted to a single subject ie WebMD
Verifying Sources
Unlike scholarly books and journal articles, web sites are seldom reviewed or refereed. It's up to you to
check for bias and to determine objectivity. Try to assess the stability of the pages you reference.
Understand legitimacy of web address: edu, gov, mil- most reliable sources. com, net ,org Countries
have specific codes .ca, .uk, etc
look closely at the page sponsor, last date updated, and the authority of the author(s) if
possible.
Research Information on domain ownership whois.net/
Verify inbound links checkbacklinks.net
Check web traffic Alexa.com
Information Aggregators
These are tools which pull in information from multiple sources, and consolidate that information into a
smaller and more easily digested number of streams
RSS Feeds (Google Reader, Bloglines)
Pull blogs into a single stream of information
Spokeo - Big Brother Of Social Networking http://www.pandia.com/sew/620-spokeo.html
123people.com– Gateway to Paid databases. Shows available websites around a specific name.
Pipl- The most comprehensive people search on the web
yoName – Searches Social Networks
Brizzly,
SeesmicWeb,
HootSuite,
Dabr,
Slandr, etc.
Real time news interceder.net
Email alerts
Real-time news
Social Media Networks
Website TOS, Privacy Laws and Proposed Regulations
Social Media is a key component to profiling a subject of investigation. The pool of information about
each individual can form a distinctive “social signature,” But there are limitations to the info you can
access on a Social Network due to privacy settings and anonymity.
Issues with Anonymity
We have a right to it, but websites are not allowing it via TOS. You can be anonymous online, but how
can u be anonymous online when they are asking for real info?
If you go into Facebook and setup a profile, their TOS say that is you. You have to have a valid
email address, but how do you know that they are using any random email address and name?
It is not illegal for internet users to impersonate or create a false identity online.
Popularity of a site comes with vulnerability of attack.
We are seeing an increase in SPOOFING - i.e. reset password emails giving someone else
ownership of your account.
Be advised that accounts under a person’s name can be a result of spoofing and not necessarily
created by a user.
In the context of network security, a spoofing attack is a situation in which one person or
program successfully masquerades as another by falsifying data and thereby gaining an
illegitimate advantage.
The Privacy Debate
We want privacy; we expose private details of our lives online.
Once you post something, you are leaving a digital footprint that is owned by the site.
Facebook has been receiving a lot of bad press. Users fear of how their data might be used. Privacy
Policies and TOS are constantly being changed
We are seeing 2 different agendas in terms of advocates in online privacy
We put pressure on websites to protect our information, and we do reserve that right.
But the same time because of the vast scope and information on social media the government wants a
backdoor to get info for investigations and terrorism research.
this will leave personal info vulnerable to hackers...
Consider This…
There are different privacy laws in every country.
Check TOS and privacy laws on each websites. They may allow backdoors.
Privacy Settings
It’s Important to understand privacy laws and settings for major social networks to understand
limitations, and how to potentially work around them...
Users can select their own privacy settings, and there are few ways to get around them,
Facebook Profiles Offer
Phone numbers,
Email addresses,
Photos provide a history and timeline.
Status updates offer current whereabouts etc.
Privacy Settings: Profile can be viewable by
No one,
Viewed by everyone,
Friends Of Friends,
Friends Only,
Custom
Public Tweets:
Your updates appear in Twitter’s public timeline — a flowing river of every member’s status.
Anyone can see your Twitter updates.
Your Twitter updates can be indexed by search engines.
Protected Tweets:
People will have to request to follow you and each follow request will need approval
You’re Profile and Tweets will only be visible to users you've approved
Protected Profiles' Tweets will not appear in Twitter search
@replies sent to people who aren't following you will not be seen
You cannot share static page URL's with non-followers
MySpace Default Settings:
By default, people on MySpace can see when you’re online. Your profile and photo is also set to be
viewable by everyone.
Privacy Options:
MySpace’s privacy options are very limited, but changing three key settings can provide you with some
important privacy protection:
Online Now
Profile Viewable by
Photos
Tips & Tricks
If you have an email address you want to put a face to, you can also find who owns an email address by
searching the email address in the Facebook search window.
Anyone can create a fake profile so use this to your advantage. Some users will allow friends of friends
to access part if not all of a profile. Befriend a friend of someone you are investigating.
RESOURCE:
How to Protect Your Privacy on Facebook, Myspace, And Linked In
http://www.mint.com/blog/moneyhack/howto-protect-your-privacy-on-facebook-myspace-and-
linkedin/
How do you get in and see info if it’s been deleted?
Tweleted allowed you to recover Twitter message
If user a quotes user b who then removes tweet, it will still show up in user a's quotes.
23.Properly Documenting Social Media Investigations
Always copy urls, because sometimes you can’t backtrack. Google updates its results constantly and
with the more than 20 billion websites out there, you may never find the same info again.
Take screenshots of content. (i.e. craigslist ads)
Consider making use of CAMTASIA, a screen recorder and editing software program.
Take Screen captures the fly
Draw attention with arrows, add text
Organizational tools - Search for your captures by date, website, or a custom flag that you create
and assign.
Centrifuge Systems
Centrifuge has created a powerful approach to analysis called “Interactive Analytics”. Our next
generation approach provides groundbreaking visualizations accessible from any browser and any
operating system.
“Interactive Analytics” (IA) is based on extensive work with the US Intelligence Community and brings
together three innovations in analytics today, Interactive Data Visualization, Unified Data Views and
Collaborative Analysis.
http://www.centrifugesystems.com/
25.AskSam.com
A free-form database designed for users rather than programmers (Like a CMS)
Easy to turn anything into a searchable database:
email messages,
word processing
documents,
text files,
spreadsheets,
addresses,
Web pages,
and more.
http://www.asksam.com/
Factors in Predicting Online Deception
DECEPTION
Any intentional control of information in a message to create a false belief in the receiver of the
message
Frequency of Lying
How do different media affect lying and honesty?
1.75 lies identified in a 10 minute exchange
Range from 0 lies to 14 lies
Self-preservation goal (‘likeable’) increases deception
“Electronic mail is a godsend. With e-mail we needn’t worry about so much as a quiver in our
voice or a tremor in our pinkie when telling a lie. Email is a first rate deception-enabler.”
~Keyes (2004) The Post-Truth Era
True Personality vs. Embellished Identity
i,
me,
my,
mine,
you ,
your(s)
him
his
he
she
her
hers
Changing pronouns as benign as it seems is the queen mother of linguistic violations and is a very strong
indication that deception might be present!
For instance our house vs. my house
In many cases if a person does not start with "i" the statement is more likely to be lacking credibility.
Consider that
The others were not significant enough to mention
There is emotional distance
The author may be trying to conceal someone's presence in the story
The author is under tremendous amount of stress
We went to the store
He and I went to the stores
I went to the store with him
it
its
they
them
their
theirs
us
we
our(s)
myself
Yourself
himself
herself
ourselves
themselves
http://www.likasoft.com/document-search/
Online Deception
The ambiguity of the Internet allows complete anonymity, providing the user with the ability to create
false and misleading profiles and identities online, thus hiding their true identity.
gender swapping online
with men playing women
Adults posing as children etc
lies or exaggerations of
one’s physical appearance
personality or characteristics
or even slight exaggerations of a genuine characteristic such as denying being a smoker, drinker,
etc.
One can have ‘as many electronic personas as one has time and energy to create’ (Donath, 1999).
CASE STUDY ON DECEPTION ON FACEBOOK
STUDY
The University of Texas at Austin that suggest users express their true personality – not an
embellished identity – over online social networks such as Facebook.
The Texas researchers collected 236 profiles of college-aged users of Facebook in the United
States and StudiVZ, the equivalent in Germany. The users filled out questionnaires about their
personality and also about who they'd like to be. Strangers browsed and rated the online
profiles, and the study authors compared the ratings with the users' questionnaires.
FINDINGS:
Networks such as Facebook are more “genuine mediums for social interactions than vehicles for
self-promotion,”
But whether honesty on Facebook comes naturally or is necessitated by your audience is up for
debate “You don't have full control over it. Other people can write things on your wall and tag
you in unflattering photos. etc” Stated Professor Hancock
Detecting Deception
Inconsistencies in actions or words do not necessarily indicate a lie, just as consistency is not necessarily
a guarantee of the truth.
However, a pattern of inconsistencies or unexplainable behavior normally indicates deceit.
Techniques for Identifying Deceit
Control Questions
Repeat questions
Should not be exact repetitions of an earlier question.
The investigator must rephrase or otherwise disguise the previous question.
Repeat questions also need to be separated in time from the original question so the
information cannot easily be remembered.
Developed from recently confirmed or known information that is not likely to have changed
If the answer to a control question is not given as expected, it may be an indicator of deceit.
Example:
Q1 – What was the score of the baseball game?
A1 – Well, first of all, you wouldn’t believe how much the tickets cost; then I had to get something to
eat, which is a total waste of money....
Topical Examples:
Last day of school, Vacation dates
School events, Pop culture trivia
Video game trivia
Internal Inconsistencies
Frequently when someone is lying, an investigator will be able to identify inconsistencies in the timeline,
the circumstances surrounding key events, or other areas within the questioning.
For example, someone spends a long time explaining something that took a short time to happen, or a
short time telling of an event that took a relatively long time to happen.
Example:
Q1 – What was the score of the baseball game?
A1 – Well, first of all, you wouldn’t believe how much the tickets cost; then I had to get something to
eat, which is a total waste of money....
Placement” and “Access”
Based on a person’s job, geographical location, age, etc., investigators should have a basic idea of the
breadth and depth of information that such a person should know.
When answers show that someone does not have the expected level of information (too much or too
little or different information than expected), this may be an indicator of deceit.
Example:
In an extreme case, if someone is interrupted in the middle of a statement on a given topic, they will
have to start again at the beginning in order to “get the story straight.”
Repeated Information
Often if someone plans on lying about a topic, they will memorize or practice exactly what they are
going to say.
If they always relate an incident using exactly the same wording, or answer ‘repeat’ questions identically
(word for word) to the original question, it may be an indicator of deceit.
Incongruent Appearance and Incongruent Language
If someone’s online appearance does not match their story, it may be an indication of deceit.
If the type of language, including sentence structure and vocabulary, does not match the story,
this may also be an indicator of deceit.
Example:
If the suspected liar does not use the proper technical vocabulary to match an otherwise familiar
story, this may be an indicator of deceit.
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