The Digital Collective or Digital Grange
In world history classes, discussions are made about how the
command economies of the eastern nations had permitted individuals or
communities to form legal relationships, known as collectives, so that agrarian
communities could obtain and share equipment that was too expensive for persons
to purchase individually. Perhaps the concept of the collective or grange that
has been an idea common to mankind throughout history could be applied with
regard to computer forensic equipment in the United
States.
Perhaps a “digital grange” could be established where public
entities such as law enforcement and private entities such as private
investigators and corporate security could store and borrow computer forensic
hardware, software and various tools as needed. This would be a type of lending
library for such entities.
There is a book called “Day
of Empire,” by Amy Chua, [1], and it says that all great empires have had two
things in common. They all have a rich diversity of people from which to draw
talent, and do not persecute people because of their differences. The second is
that they are open to new ideas, test their feasibility and apply them if
useful. Perhaps a leader in computer forensics can draw from the rich diversity
of people in his or her company and then test those ideas with the legal
community. These ideas may come from various disciplines, cultures or economic
systems. Then if an idea is feasible, it may be applied to modern technological
problems where resources are limited.
Perhaps the digital grange may be one way for a confederation
of parties to afford and share equipment. The probability that they will all
need the same equipment at the same time seems low, but such demands could be
taken into account in the construction of the confederation. If a priority
system is proffered and agreed to and it is constructed to meet the foreseeable
needs of the organizational members, it may become a practical solution for
each party/member, giving the participants access to the vast array of
equipment and tools needed for their work.
References
- Chua, A., (2007) “Day of Empire: How
Hyperpowers Rise to Global Dominance–and Why They Fall”