386 research outputs found
An Improved Statistic for the Pooled Triangle Test against PRNU-Copy Attack
We propose a new statistic to improve the pooled version of the triangle test
used to combat the fingerprint-copy counter-forensic attack against PRNU-based
camera identification [1]. As opposed to the original version of the test, the
new statistic exploits the one-tail nature of the test, weighting differently
positive and negative deviations from the expected value of the correlation
between the image under analysis and the candidate images, i.e., those image
suspected to have been used during the attack. The experimental results confirm
the superior performance of the new test, especially when the conditions of the
test are challenging ones, that is when the number of images used for the
fingerprint-copy attack is large and the size of the image under test is small.Comment: submitted to IEEE Signal Processing Letter
Image counter-forensics based on feature injection
Starting from the concept that many image forensic tools are based on the detection of some features revealing a particular aspect of the history of an image, in this work we model the counter-forensic attack as the injection of a specific fake feature pointing to the same history of an authentic reference image. We propose a general attack strategy that does not rely on a specific detector structure. Given a source image x and a target image y, the adversary processes x in the pixel domain producing an attacked image (x) over tilde, perceptually similar to x, whose feature f((x) over tilde) is as close as possible to f (y) computed on y. Our proposed counter-forensic attack consists in the constrained minimization of the feature distance Phi(z) = vertical bar f (z) f (y) vertical bar through iterative methods based on gradient descent. To solve the intrinsic limit due to the numerical estimation of the gradient on large images, we propose the application of a feature decomposition process, that allows the problem to be reduced into many subproblems on the blocks the image is partitioned into. The proposed strategy has been tested by attacking three different features and its performance has been compared to state-of-the-art counter-forensic methods
Multimedia Forensics
This book is open access. Media forensics has never been more relevant to societal life. Not only media content represents an ever-increasing share of the data traveling on the net and the preferred communications means for most users, it has also become integral part of most innovative applications in the digital information ecosystem that serves various sectors of society, from the entertainment, to journalism, to politics. Undoubtedly, the advances in deep learning and computational imaging contributed significantly to this outcome. The underlying technologies that drive this trend, however, also pose a profound challenge in establishing trust in what we see, hear, and read, and make media content the preferred target of malicious attacks. In this new threat landscape powered by innovative imaging technologies and sophisticated tools, based on autoencoders and generative adversarial networks, this book fills an important gap. It presents a comprehensive review of state-of-the-art forensics capabilities that relate to media attribution, integrity and authenticity verification, and counter forensics. Its content is developed to provide practitioners, researchers, photo and video enthusiasts, and students a holistic view of the field
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