7,448 research outputs found
On the Design of Perceptual MPEG-Video Encryption Algorithms
In this paper, some existing perceptual encryption algorithms of MPEG videos
are reviewed and some problems, especially security defects of two recently
proposed MPEG-video perceptual encryption schemes, are pointed out. Then, a
simpler and more effective design is suggested, which selectively encrypts
fixed-length codewords (FLC) in MPEG-video bitstreams under the control of
three perceptibility factors. The proposed design is actually an encryption
configuration that can work with any stream cipher or block cipher. Compared
with the previously-proposed schemes, the new design provides more useful
features, such as strict size-preservation, on-the-fly encryption and multiple
perceptibility, which make it possible to support more applications with
different requirements. In addition, four different measures are suggested to
provide better security against known/chosen-plaintext attacks.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, IEEEtran.cl
A Novel Latin Square Image Cipher
In this paper, we introduce a symmetric-key Latin square image cipher (LSIC)
for grayscale and color images. Our contributions to the image encryption
community include 1) we develop new Latin square image encryption primitives
including Latin Square Whitening, Latin Square S-box and Latin Square P-box ;
2) we provide a new way of integrating probabilistic encryption in image
encryption by embedding random noise in the least significant image bit-plane;
and 3) we construct LSIC with these Latin square image encryption primitives
all on one keyed Latin square in a new loom-like substitution-permutation
network. Consequently, the proposed LSIC achieve many desired properties of a
secure cipher including a large key space, high key sensitivities, uniformly
distributed ciphertext, excellent confusion and diffusion properties,
semantically secure, and robustness against channel noise. Theoretical analysis
show that the LSIC has good resistance to many attack models including
brute-force attacks, ciphertext-only attacks, known-plaintext attacks and
chosen-plaintext attacks. Experimental analysis under extensive simulation
results using the complete USC-SIPI Miscellaneous image dataset demonstrate
that LSIC outperforms or reach state of the art suggested by many peer
algorithms. All these analysis and results demonstrate that the LSIC is very
suitable for digital image encryption. Finally, we open source the LSIC MATLAB
code under webpage https://sites.google.com/site/tuftsyuewu/source-code.Comment: 26 pages, 17 figures, and 7 table
Anonymous subject identification and privacy information management in video surveillance
The widespread deployment of surveillance cameras has raised serious privacy concerns, and many privacy-enhancing schemes have been recently proposed to automatically redact images of selected individuals in the surveillance video for protection. Of equal importance are the privacy and efficiency of techniques to first, identify those individuals for privacy protection and second, provide access to original surveillance video contents for security analysis. In this paper, we propose an anonymous subject identification and privacy data management system to be used in privacy-aware video surveillance. The anonymous subject identification system uses iris patterns to identify individuals for privacy protection. Anonymity of the iris-matching process is guaranteed through the use of a garbled-circuit (GC)-based iris matching protocol. A novel GC complexity reduction scheme is proposed by simplifying the iris masking process in the protocol. A user-centric privacy information management system is also proposed that allows subjects to anonymously access their privacy information via their iris patterns. The system is composed of two encrypted-domain protocols: The privacy information encryption protocol encrypts the original video records using the iris pattern acquired during the subject identification phase; the privacy information retrieval protocol allows the video records to be anonymously retrieved through a GC-based iris pattern matching process. Experimental results on a public iris biometric database demonstrate the validity of our framework
Recovering Missing Coefficients in DCT-Transformed Images
A general method for recovering missing DCT coefficients in DCT-transformed
images is presented in this work. We model the DCT coefficients recovery
problem as an optimization problem and recover all missing DCT coefficients via
linear programming. The visual quality of the recovered image gradually
decreases as the number of missing DCT coefficients increases. For some images,
the quality is surprisingly good even when more than 10 most significant DCT
coefficients are missing. When only the DC coefficient is missing, the proposed
algorithm outperforms existing methods according to experimental results
conducted on 200 test images. The proposed recovery method can be used for
cryptanalysis of DCT based selective encryption schemes and other applications.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Synchronization of spatiotemporal semiconductor lasers and its application in color image encryption
Optical chaos is a topic of current research characterized by
high-dimensional nonlinearity which is attributed to the delay-induced
dynamics, high bandwidth and easy modular implementation of optical feedback.
In light of these facts, which adds enough confusion and diffusion properties
for secure communications, we explore the synchronization phenomena in
spatiotemporal semiconductor laser systems. The novel system is used in a
two-phase colored image encryption process. The high-dimensional chaotic
attractor generated by the system produces a completely randomized chaotic time
series, which is ideal in the secure encoding of messages. The scheme thus
illustrated is a two-phase encryption method, which provides sufficiently high
confusion and diffusion properties of chaotic cryptosystem employed with unique
data sets of processed chaotic sequences. In this novel method of cryptography,
the chaotic phase masks are represented as images using the chaotic sequences
as the elements of the image. The scheme drastically permutes the positions of
the picture elements. The next additional layer of security further alters the
statistical information of the original image to a great extent along the
three-color planes. The intermediate results during encryption demonstrate the
infeasibility for an unauthorized user to decipher the cipher image. Exhaustive
statistical tests conducted validate that the scheme is robust against noise
and resistant to common attacks due to the double shield of encryption and the
infinite dimensionality of the relevant system of partial differential
equations.Comment: 20 pages, 11 figures; Article in press, Optics Communications (2011
Securing Interactive Sessions Using Mobile Device through Visual Channel and Visual Inspection
Communication channel established from a display to a device's camera is
known as visual channel, and it is helpful in securing key exchange protocol.
In this paper, we study how visual channel can be exploited by a network
terminal and mobile device to jointly verify information in an interactive
session, and how such information can be jointly presented in a user-friendly
manner, taking into account that the mobile device can only capture and display
a small region, and the user may only want to authenticate selective
regions-of-interests. Motivated by applications in Kiosk computing and
multi-factor authentication, we consider three security models: (1) the mobile
device is trusted, (2) at most one of the terminal or the mobile device is
dishonest, and (3) both the terminal and device are dishonest but they do not
collude or communicate. We give two protocols and investigate them under the
abovementioned models. We point out a form of replay attack that renders some
other straightforward implementations cumbersome to use. To enhance
user-friendliness, we propose a solution using visual cues embedded into the 2D
barcodes and incorporate the framework of "augmented reality" for easy
verifications through visual inspection. We give a proof-of-concept
implementation to show that our scheme is feasible in practice.Comment: 16 pages, 10 figure
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