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SIFT – File Fragment Classification Without Metadata

Shahid Alam

20236 citationsDOI

Abstract

A vital issue of file carving in digital forensics is type classification of file fragments when the filesystem metadata is missing. Over the past decades, there have been several efforts for developing methods to classify file fragments. In this research, a novel sifting approach, named SIFT (Sifting File Types), is proposed. SIFT outperforms the other state-of-the-art techniques by at least 8%. (1) One of the significant differences between SIFT and others is that SIFT uses a single byte as a separate feature, i.e., a total of 256 (0×00 – 0×FF) features. We also call this a lossless feature (information) extraction, i.e., there is no loss of information. (2) The other significant difference is the technique used to estimate inter-Classes and intra-Classes information gain of a feature. Unlike others, SIFT adapts TF-IDF for this purpose, and computes and assigns weight to each byte (feature) in a fragment (sample). With these significant differences and approaches, SIFT produces promising (better) results compared to other works.

Topics & Concepts

Scale-invariant feature transformComputer scienceMetadataByteDigital forensicsFeature extractionFeature (linguistics)Artificial intelligencePattern recognition (psychology)Information retrievalWorld Wide WebOperating systemLinguisticsPhilosophyDigital and Cyber ForensicsAdvanced Malware Detection TechniquesDigital Media Forensic Detection
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