Abstract

As screenshots of copyrighted video content are spreading through the Internet without any regulation, cases of copyright infringement have been observed. Further, it is difficult to use existing forensic techniques for determining whether or not a given image was captured from a screen. Thus, we propose a screenshot identification scheme using the trace of screen capture. Since most television systems and camcorders use interlaced scanning, many screenshots are taken from interlaced videos. Consequently, these screenshots contain the trace of interlaced videos, combing artifacts. In this study, we identify a screenshot using the characteristics of combing artifacts that appear to be shaped like horizontal jagged noise and can be found around the edges. To identify a screenshot, the edge areas are extracted using the gray level co-occurrence matrix (GLCM). Then, the amount of combing artifacts is calculated in the extracted edge areas by using the similarity ratio (SR), the ratio of the horizontal noise to the vertical noise. By analyzing the directional inequality of noise components, the proposed scheme identifies the source of an input image. In the experiments conducted, the identification accuracy is measured in various environments. The results prove that the proposed identification scheme is stable and performs well.

Highlights

  • With a more capable Internet than ever before, many people have started to collect and share information about their interests through the Internet

  • In the set SS, there are two subsets CS and PS: CS is the set of screenshots taken from camcorder recorded content and PS is the set of screenshots taken from TV programs

  • Undetermined in the experimental results means that the input image is edgeless, so the proposed process cannot extract any edge blocks

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Summary

Introduction

With a more capable Internet than ever before, many people have started to collect and share information about their interests through the Internet. The screenshot identification process consists of three steps: finding edge blocks, measuring the directional inequality, and determining the image source. 3.1 Screenshot identification process: finding edge blocks One possible way of identifying a test image as a screenshot is to measure the amount of combing artifacts.

Results
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