Abstract

Local binary patterns are best known because of their robust texture-defining capacities and digital watermarking used to prove multimedia content copyright. This work presents an overview of the binary watermark in the image blocks by changing the pixels conveyed by the LBP pattern of the neighborhood. However, different photo blocks can have the same LBP pattern, which in the watermark process can lead to incorrect detection. In other words, without changing your watermark message, one can change the host image deliberately. Moreover, before watermark embedding, there is no encryption procedure, which leads to another potential security problem. In this paper, we examine the identical process of LBP synthesis or reverse LBP and its suitability for the digital watermarking image. The process of LBP synthesis varies by pixel values so that the LBP from these pixels is the required synthesizable value. Due to the LBP synthesis character, the watermark needs to be integrated with only a few pixels of the given block. The results show that rotational, JPEG compression, and scalable attacks are robust with the technique. This LBP synthesis could also be used to justify ownership using watermark sensor data.

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