MMIVMar 13, 2018

Robust LSB Watermarking Optimized for Local Structural Similarity

arXiv:1803.04617v132 citations
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This work addresses copyright protection for digital media, specifically images, but appears incremental as it adapts existing LSB methods to a known quality metric.

The paper tackles the problem of digital image watermarking by proposing a robust LSB watermarking scheme optimized for structural similarity, with simulation results showing the watermark can be extracted with acceptable accuracy after various attacks.

Growth of the Internet and networked multimedia systems has emphasized the need for copyright protection of the media. Media can be images, audio clips, videos and etc. Digital watermarking is today extensively used for many applications such as authentication of ownership or identification of illegal copies. Digital watermark is an invisible or maybe visible structure added to the original media (known as asset). Images are considered as communication channel when they are subject to a watermark embedding procedure so in the case of embedding a digital watermark in an image, the capacity of the channel should be considered. There is a trade-off between imperceptibility, robustness and capacity for embedding a watermark in an asset. In the case of image watermarks, it is reasonable that the watermarking algorithm should depend on the content and structure of the image. Conventionally, mean squared error (MSE) has been used as a common distortion measure to assess the quality of the images. Newly developed quality metrics proposed some distortion measures that are based on human visual system (HVS). These metrics show that MSE is not based on HVS and it has a lack of accuracy when dealing with perceptually important signals such as images and videos. SSIM or structural similarity is a state of the art HVS based image quality criterion that has recently been of much interest. In this paper we propose a robust least significant bit (LSB) watermarking scheme which is optimized for structural similarity. The watermark is embedded into a host image through an adaptive algorithm. Various attacks examined on the embedding approach and simulation results revealed the fact that the watermarked sequence can be extracted with an acceptable accuracy after all attacks.

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