New technique to prevent illegal copying of photos, videos & Books
Scientists have developed an
innovative light-based technique to create secure, invisible watermarks that
can be used to prevent photos, videos and books from being illegally copied and
distributed. "In our research, we use a complex pattern of light, or
diffraction pattern, as a unique watermark," said Yishi Shi, from the
University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, China.
"The invisible watermark
is embedded into the content we are trying to protect. Imperceptibility is one
of the most significant advantages of optical watermarking," said Shi. The
new approach encodes the optical watermark in a single step. It is faster and
uses a less complex optical setup than other optical watermarking approaches
previously pursued, researchers said.
The technique can also be
used to optically encrypt data or to hide information within images. The method
is based on a technique called single-shot ptychography encoding (SPE) that
uses multiple partially-overlapping beams of light to generate a diffraction
pattern from a complex object. Unlike other methods, SPE can encode the optical
watermark in a single exposure with no mechanical scanning.
SPE is also less prone to
error than other methods and uses a simpler optical setup. In addition to
conducting numerical simulations to test their method, the researchers carried
out an optical experiment showing the usefulness of SPE. "Most methods for
optical watermarking have only been demonstrated with simulations. Our
experiment shows that our method is suitable for practical optical
watermarking," said Shi.
For the optical experiment,
the researchers used SPE to create a complex watermark consisting of a
diffraction pattern of multiple tiny spots. Prior to embedding the watermark
into a host image, they used computer processing to remove any repeated data
and to scramble the diffraction pattern, making it easier to embed the
watermark and further improving its security.
The spot size can be reduced
to smaller than 10 microns, which helps prevent degradation of the host image.
Once a watermark is embedded into digital media, there are multiple ways to
detect it to check for authenticity. If someone knows an optical watermark is
present, it can be detected by subtracting the host image from the watermarked
image and then using a special security key and extraction algorithm.
For cases where the presence
of a watermark is unknown, the watermark could be extracted using existing
algorithm-based detection methods. The research was published in the journal
Optics Express.
Source | Daily News Analysis | 25 November 2016
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