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Technology

Legal team hack Xbox memory for defence evidence

By Paul Marks

24 February 2010

New Scientist. Science news and long reads from expert journalists, covering developments in science, technology, health and the environment on the website and the magazine.

Getting inside the Xbox ecosystem

(Image: Nick Veasey/Getty)

LEAVING a software vulnerability unpatched can give hackers a way to seize control of your computer. Such vulnerabilities can also be useful if you’re in the digital forensics business.

So say Chris Hargreaves and Joe Rabaiotti at Cranfield University in Shrivenham, UK. They have found a way to use vulnerabilities to tease forensic evidence out of games consoles, smartphones and e-books, where access to the inner workings is restricted by the manufacturer.

In 2009, they were hired as investigators by a legal team appealing against the conviction of a vendor of so-called…

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