Traditional video steganography methods are based on modifying the covert space for embedding, whereas we propose an innovative approach that embeds secret message within semantic feature for steganography during the video editing process. Although existing traditional video steganography methods display a certain level of security and embedding capacity, they lack adequate robustness against common distortions in online social networks (OSNs). In this paper, we introduce an end-to-end robust generative video steganography network (RoGVS), which achieves visual editing by modifying semantic feature of videos to embed secret message. We employ face-swapping scenario to showcase the visual editing effects. We first design a secret message embedding module to adaptively hide secret message into the semantic feature of videos. Extensive experiments display that the proposed RoGVS method applied to facial video datasets demonstrate its superiority over existing video and image steganography techniques in terms of both robustness and capacity.
This paper introduces the idea of the color Clifford Hardy signal, which can be used to process color images. As a complex analytic function's high-dimensional analogue, the color Clifford Hardy signal inherits many desirable qualities of analyticity. A crucial tool for getting the color and structural data is the local feature representation of a color image in the color Clifford Hardy signal. By looking at the extended Cauchy-Riemann equations in the high-dimensional space, it is possible to see the connection between the different parts of the color Clifford Hardy signal. Based on the distinctive and important local amplitude and local phase generated by the color Clifford Hardy signal, we propose five methods to identify the edges of color images with relation to a certain color. To prove the superiority of the offered methodologies, numerous comparative studies employing image quality assessment criteria are used. Specifically by using the multi-scale structure of the color Clifford Hardy signal, the proposed approaches are resistant to a variety of noises. In addition, a color optical flow detection method with anti-noise ability is provided as an example of application.
RAW files are the initial measurement of scene radiance widely used in most cameras, and the ubiquitously-used RGB images are converted from RAW data through Image Signal Processing (ISP) pipelines. Nowadays, digital images are risky of being nefariously manipulated. Inspired by the fact that innate immunity is the first line of body defense, we propose DRAW, a novel scheme of defending images against manipulation by protecting their sources, i.e., camera-shooted RAWs. Specifically, we design a lightweight Multi-frequency Partial Fusion Network (MPF-Net) friendly to devices with limited computing resources by frequency learning and partial feature fusion. It introduces invisible watermarks as protective signal into the RAW data. The protection capability can not only be transferred into the rendered RGB images regardless of the applied ISP pipeline, but also is resilient to post-processing operations such as blurring or compression. Once the image is manipulated, we can accurately identify the forged areas with a localization network. Extensive experiments on several famous RAW datasets, e.g., RAISE, FiveK and SIDD, indicate the effectiveness of our method. We hope that this technique can be used in future cameras as an option for image protection, which could effectively restrict image manipulation at the source.
Previous image forensics schemes for crop detection are only limited on predicting whether an image has been cropped. This paper presents a novel scheme for image crop localization using robust watermarking. We further extend our scheme to detect tampering attack on the attacked image. We demonstrate that our scheme is the first to provide high-accuracy and robust image crop localization. Besides, the accuracy of tamper detection is comparable to many state-of-the-art methods.