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Investigation covers the forensic analysis of cyber incidents, helping determine how attacks occurred, what was affected, and which evidence supports response.

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Investigation is the systematic examination of an event, claim, or suspected activity to establish what happened, when it happened, and who or what was involved. In information security, it commonly covers suspected intrusions, misuse of accounts, data exposure, fraud, and control failures. Investigators reconstruct an event from sources such as authentication records, endpoint artifacts, network telemetry, cloud logs, and disk or memory images, then determine the affected systems, data, and attack path.

Reliable investigations depend on preserving evidence without altering it, recording its provenance, and separating confirmed facts from assumptions. Findings can guide containment and recovery, reveal vulnerabilities that require remediation, and provide threat intelligence about tools or techniques used against an organization. Privacy and legal requirements may restrict what data can be collected or shared, while weak logging, short retention, or uncontrolled access can leave important questions unanswered and undermine any disciplinary, regulatory, or judicial action.

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The Security Service of Ukraine (SSU) said it, together with the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), uncovered a long-running campaign orchestrated by Russian intelligence services to break into the messaging accounts of government officials, military personnel, politicians, and activists in Ukraine, Europe, and the U.S

Despite the abundance of telemetry at analysts’ disposal, many security operations teams struggle to answer a few basic questions during incident investigation: What happened? What evidence do we have? How do we know we’re seeing it all, in context? Answering these questions requires teams to go beyond alerts, the most common basis for initial triage. But investigations (and their outcomes)