Abstract

Cloud computing offers advantages in handling the exponential growth of images but also entails privacy concerns on outsourced private images. Reversible data hiding (RDH) over encrypted images has emerged as an effective technique for securely storing and managing confidential images in the cloud. Most existing schemes only work on uncompressed images. However, almost all images are transmitted and stored in compressed formats such as JPEG. Recently, some RDH schemes over encrypted JPEG bitstreams have been developed, but these works have some disadvantages such as a small embedding capacity (particularly for low quality factors), damage to the JPEG format, and file size expansion. In this study, we propose a permutation-based embedding technique that allows the embedding of significantly more data than existing techniques. Using the proposed embedding technique, we further design a large-capacity RDH scheme over encrypted JPEG bitstreams, in which a grouping method is designed to boost the number of embeddable blocks. The designed RDH scheme allows a content owner to encrypt a JPEG bitstream before uploading it to a cloud server. The cloud server can embed additional data (e.g., copyright and identification information) into the encrypted JPEG bitstream for storage, management, or other processing purpose. A receiver can losslessly recover the original JPEG bitstream using a decryption key. Comprehensive evaluation results demonstrate that our proposed design can achieve approximately twice the average embedding capacity compared to the best prior scheme while preserving the file format without file size expansion.

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