Abstract

Video shreds of evidence are usually admissible in the court of law all over the world. However, individuals manipulate these videos to either defame or incriminate innocent people. Others indulge in video tampering to falsely escape the wrath of the law against misconducts. One way impostors can forge these videos is through inter-frame video forgery. Thus, the integrity of such videos is under threat. This is because these digital forgeries seriously debase the credibility of video contents as being definite records of events. This leads to an increasing concern about the trustworthiness of video contents. Hence, it continues to affect the social and legal system, forensic investigations, intelligence services, and security and surveillance systems as the case may be. The problem of inter-frame video forgery is increasingly spontaneous as more video-editing software continues to emerge. These video editing tools can easily manipulate videos without leaving obvious traces and these tampered videos become viral. Alarmingly, even the beginner users of these editing tools can alter the contents of digital videos in a manner that renders them practically indistinguishable from the original content by mere observations. This paper, however, leveraged on the concept of correlation coefficients to produce a more elaborate and reliable inter-frame video detection to aid forensic investigations, especially in Nigeria. The model employed the use of the idea of a threshold to efficiently distinguish forged videos from authentic videos. A benchmark and locally manipulated video datasets were used to evaluate the proposed model. Experimentally, our approach performed better than the existing methods. The overall accuracy for all the evaluation metrics such as accuracy, recall, precision and F1-score was 100%. The proposed method implemented in the MATLAB programming language has proven to effectively detect inter-frame forgeries.

Highlights

  • Video forgeries continue to be a great challenge to the admissibility of video evidence in the court of law, especially in Nigeria.Due to the rapid increase in highly sophisticated video-editing software and video tampering techniques, there are several kinds of tampering techniques such as splicing, resampling, adding and or removing a portion from a video clip to mention but a few [1]

  • It has become imperative to carry out more research in the exploration for better ways to avert the bothersome level of digital video content manipulations

  • This study leveraged on the consistency of correlation coefficients

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Video forgeries continue to be a great challenge to the admissibility of video evidence in the court of law, especially in Nigeria.Due to the rapid increase in highly sophisticated video-editing software and video tampering techniques, there are several kinds of tampering techniques such as splicing, resampling, adding and or removing a portion from a video clip to mention but a few [1]. Video forgeries continue to be a great challenge to the admissibility of video evidence in the court of law, especially in Nigeria. Inter-frame video forgery is the removal or insertion of a set of frames from or into a video [2]. Such practices affect the sequence of frames in a video. Considering that videos can be used as evidence in the court of law or as news items, there is a need for authentication of these videos. With very few forensic experts in Nigeria tasked with the huge responsibility of authenticating videos for forensic purposes, there is a need to develop novel approaches to tackle video forgeries

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call