Fujitsu exploitation of steganography : (a) a sketch representing the concept and
(b) the idea deployed into a mobile phone shown at an exhibition
recently
recently
Inspired by the notion that steganography
can be embedded as part of the normal printing process, the Japanese
firmFujitsu3 is developing technology to encode data into a printed picture that
is invisible to the human eye (data),but can be decoded by a mobile phone with a
camera as exemplified in figure a and shown in action in figure b. The process takes
less than one second as the embedded data is merely 12 bytes. Hence, users will
be able to use their cellular phones to capture encoded data.
They charge a small fee for the
use of their decoding software which sits on the firm’s own servers. The basic
idea is to transform the image colour scheme prior to printing to its hue,
saturation and value components (HSV), then embed into the Hue domain to which
human eyes are not sensitive. Mobile cameras can see the coded data and
retrieve it. This application can be used for “doctor’s prescriptions, food
wrappers, billboards, business cards and printed media such as magazines and
pamphlets” , or to replace barcodes. The confidence in the integrity of visual
imagery has been ruined by contemporary digital technology. This led to further
research pertaining to digital document forensics. As an example, Cheddad et
al. proposed a security scheme which
protects scanned documents from forgery using self-embedding techniques. The
method not only points out forgery but also allows legal or forensics experts
to gain access to the original document despite being manipulated.
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