Abstract
This paper proposes a new adaptive watermarking scheme for digital images, which has the properties of blind extraction, invisibility, and robustness against attacks. The typical scheme for invisibility and robustness consisted of two main techniques: finding local positions to be watermarked and mixing or embedding the watermark into the pixels of the locations. In finding the location, however, our scheme uses a global space such that the multiple watermarking data is spread out over all four lowest-frequency subbands, resulting from n-level Mallat-tree 2D (dimensional) DWT, where n depends on the amount of watermarking data and the resolution of the host image, without any further process to find the watermarking locations. To embed the watermark data into the subband coefficients, weighting factors are used according to the type and energy of each subband to adjust the strength of the watermark, so we call this an adaptive scheme. To examine the ability of the proposed scheme, images with various resolutions are tested for various attacks, both pixel-value changing attacks and geometric attacks. With experimental results and comparison to the existing works we show that the proposed scheme has better performance than the previous works, except those which specialize in certain types of attacks.
Highlights
As content has become digitized, it has become easier to illegally copy, adjust, or manipulate digital content
This paper focuses on digital watermarking for digital images
All the image qualities before and after attacks are enumerated in the peak signal to noise ratio (PSNR) values, while all the robustness against attacks is expressed in NCC value
Summary
As content has become digitized, it has become easier to illegally copy, adjust, or manipulate digital content This has created the need to protect the ownership of digital content. The need for ownership protection of image/video content is a very serious issue [1]. A watermarking is usually embedded as unrecognizable, but sometimes it is intentionally recognizable. The former is called invisible watermarking and the latter is visible watermarking [2]. A usual digital watermarking scheme needs to be robust against. The scheme to be proposed here is an invisible robust digital watermarking for the ownership protection of a digital image.
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