Electronic evidence

Electronic evidence consists of these two sub-forms: analog (no longer so prevalent, but still existent in some sound recordings e.g), and digital evidence (see longer article) This rather complex relationship can be depicted graphically as shown in this part of an EU-funded project on the topic embedded here at the right. Chapter 10 of the associated 2018 book goes into more detail, as does the website, http://www.evidenceproject.eu/categorization Electronic evidence can be abbreviated as e-evidence; this shorter term is gaining in acceptance in Continental Europe.

Source: Wikipedia — Electronic evidence (CC BY-SA 4.0)

Electronic evidence

Electronic evidence consists of these two sub-forms: analog (no longer so prevalent, but still existent in some sound recordings e.g), and digital evidence (see longer article) This rather complex relationship can be depicted graphically as shown in this part of an EU-funded project on the topic embedded here at the right. Chapter 10 of the associated 2018 book goes into more detail, as does the website, http://www.evidenceproject.eu/categorization Electronic evidence can be abbreviated as e-evidence; this shorter term is gaining in acceptance in Continental Europe.

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Source: Wikipedia "Electronic evidence" · CC BY-SA 4.0

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