References and Reading Material 1. Carrier, Brian: File System Forensic Analysis. Boston, MA, USA : Addison-Wesley Pub. Co. Inc., 2005 2. Carrier, Brian. "The sleuth kit." (TSK). http://www.sleuthkit.org/sleuthkit/. Online 2017. 3. Casey, Eoghan: Digital Evidence and Computer Crime: Forensic Science, Computers, and the Internet. Academic Press, 2011. – 3rd Edition 4. Cohen, Fred: Digital Forensic Evidence Examination. ASP Press, 2011 5. Garfinkel, Simson L. "Automating disk forensic processing with SleuthKit, XML and Python." Systematic Approaches to Digital Forensic Engineering, 2009. SADFE'09. Fourth International IEEE Workshop on. IEEE, 2009. 6. Aaron Toponce, https://pthree.org/2013/12/18/zfs-administration-appendix-d-the-true-cost-of-deduplication/. Online 2017 7. Max Bruning, https://www.joyent.com/blog/zfs-forensics-recovering-files-from-a-destroyed-zpool . Online 2017 7. Garfinkel, Simson L. „Forensics Wiki“. http://forensicswiki.org/wiki/Main_Page. Online 2017. 8. Richard III, Golden G., and Vassil Roussev. "Scalpel: A Frugal, High Performance File Carver." DFRWS. 2005. 9. United States Air Force Office of Special Investigations and The Center for Information Systems Security Studies and Research. "Foremost Filecarver". http://foremost.sourceforge.net/. Online 2017 10. Joe Mehaffey, Jack Yeazel, Sam Penrod, Allory Deiss. http://gpsinformation.net/. Online 2017 11. Dale DePriest, http://www.gpsinformation.org/dale/. Online 2017